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[UPDATE] Forum Journal Issue 10: Space/s (Deadline 1 February 2010)full name / name of organization: Forum: The University of Edinburgh's Journal for Culture and the Arts contact email: forumjournal.edb@googlemail.com Forum: The University of Edinburgh's Online Postgraduate Journal of Culture and the Arts Call for Papers - Issue 10 - Space(s) With the invention of the internet – that infinite cyber space – our world has both radically expanded and contracted. Opened up, as our practice of interacting with others has been drastically changed; but contracted, as this freedom has altered our experience of spatial distance forever. Older technological advances, such as the invention of air travel, initiated this movement by enabling us to traverse and therefore grasp space in new ways. But it is not just our conception of material space that has altered; the impact has also changed our experience of mental space as well. Our world, our cities, our domestic, private, and public spaces have undergone a drastic re-definition; these new spaces have forced a change in our understanding of the nature of space itself. How do we approach these changes and the questions they raise in film, art, music, literature, theatre, and media? In what ways have our changing relations with space altered our understanding of previous spatial conceptions? What does the future hold for our sense of space in a world composed of so many different kinds of spaces, non-spaces, and gaps in space? These changes have affected not only physical and mental space, but the very idea of space itself – its boundaries, its construction, its manipulation. To speak of space in these terms suggests that it is graspable, controllable, and claimable; how does this conception of space relate to the idea that it is negation itself? What exactly are we talking of when we try to articulate ‘space’? In order to answer some of these questions, we are seeking submissions that grapple with notions of space. Topics might include, but are not limited to: * Construction or manipulation of space Papers must be of between 3,000 and 5,000 words in length, formatted according to MLA guidelines and should be sent by **1 February 2010** to forumjournal.edb@googlemail.com cfp categories: african-american american bibliography_and_history_of_the_book childrens_literature classical_studies cultural_studies_and_historical_approaches eighteenth_century ethnicity_and_national_identity film_and_television gender_studies_and_sexuality general_announcements humanities_computing_and_the_internet journals_and_collections_of_essays medieval poetry popular_culture postcolonial professional_topics religion renaissance romantic science_and_culture theatre theory travel_writing twentieth_century_and_beyond victorian
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