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Grad Conf: Captive Senses and Aesthetic Habits. October 8-9.full name / name of organization: English and Art History Departments, University of Chicago contact email: ucgradconf@gmail.com Call for Papers: Captive Senses and Aesthetic Habits. Fourth Annual Graduate Conference ~ October 8-9, 2009 But what sort of sense is constitutive of the everydayness? Surely this sense includes not sense so much as sensuousness, . . . a knowledge that lies as much in the objects and spaces of observation as in the body and mind of the observer. For decades, sensory experience has been a vital area of research in the humanities, yet much of the resulting discourse assumes that the senses operate independently both of each other and of the world. This conference seeks to explore how we might better understand sensation as an immersive bodily experience, one which can arise from both the banal and the exceptional. The conference theme, “Captive Senses and Aesthetic Habits,” seeks to raise questions about the role sensation plays in the visual arts, in literary works, and in day-to-day life. How can we be captivated by the ostensibly typical and everyday? How can we re-conceptualize perception to allow us to move beyond our habituated ways of viewing and thinking about the world? How can we speak of our experience while simultaneously acknowledging our immersion in it? Our senses are shaped by intentional training and unintentional habituation. As a result, they can direct us to certain codes or conventions, allowing us to note important features of a given artwork and our physical environment; however, assumptions and expectations can also dictate the limits of our experiences. The scholarship of keynote speaker Michael Taussig offers a fascinating, wide-ranging exploration of these issues. Face painting and camouflage, Marcel Proust and William Burroughs, the photographs of William Eggleston and the films of Georges Méliès, gold and cocaine, all become the subjects of Taussig's penetrating analyses. The Art History and English Departments at the University of Chicago are pleased to co-sponsor a conference welcoming transdisciplinary inquiries into issues of aesthetic experience and habitual knowledge. Please submit abstracts of 250-350 words as Microsoft Word email attachments to ucgradconf@gmail.com by May 11, 2009. Papers from all disciplines will be considered. Possible topics include: Reception: Construction: Captivation: Habituation: cfp categories: african-american american bibliography_and_history_of_the_book childrens_literature classical_studies cultural_studies_and_historical_approaches ecocriticism_and_environmental_studies eighteenth_century ethnicity_and_national_identity film_and_television gender_studies_and_sexuality general_announcements graduate_conferences humanities_computing_and_the_internet medieval poetry popular_culture postcolonial religion renaissance rhetoric_and_composition romantic science_and_culture theatre theory travel_writing twentieth_century_and_beyond victorian
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