AccueilThe Stuff of Tradition: Materiality and Media in Folklore Studies

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Publié le lundi 21 mars 2022

Résumé

In the forthcoming 11th international conference of Young folklorists, we seek to examine the complex relationship of folklore studies with materiality by juxtaposing it with recent re-orientations to media and (re)mediation. The conference aims to explore various materialities inherent to our data and methodology – whether obvious or ambiguous – and rethink their position in our field. We invite scholars to discuss both academic and vernacular notions on the transmission of tradition and its social and material embeddedness. We also encourage methodological discussion on how folklore scholars are themselves bound by various (new) media and technologies of documentation, archiving, and presentation.

Annonce

The eleventh international conference of Young Folklorists in Helsinki, Finland, 26–28 October 2022. These conferences are annual meetings for graduate and postgraduate students and young scholars in the field of folklore studies and related disciplines. Since 2010, YoFo has been held in Estonia, Lithuania, and Latvia, and this is the first time we are organizing it in Finland.

Argument

Having been historically conceived as the study of intangible aspects of vernacular expressive practice and having gone through its own self-critique of text- and logo-centrism, folklore studies appears to be in a tensional relationship with materiality. Within folklore studies, inscribed print communication and the “secondary orality” (Ong 1988) of audiovisual media – like radio and television – were long argued to represent an adversary or degradation of supposedly authentic modes of communication (e.g., face-to-face speech). Furthermore, many of the foundational binaries of the discipline (e.g., oral–literate, traditional–modern) can be traced to its tense relations with materiality.

We are interested in exploring this troubled relationship of folklore studies with materiality by juxtaposing it with recent re-orientations to media and (re)mediation in the shared ground between folklore, media, cultural, religious studies, ethnology, and linguistic anthropology. Indeed, the recent proliferation of digital technologies and new media platforms – not to mention our collective embrace of these media during the pandemic – seems to have only foregrounded the material and tangible aspects and effects of various communicative channels, technologies, genres, and media to the extent of introducing new horizons in many disciplines. In folklore studies, we might rethink the material, technological, and mediational nature of the central processes of textualization, traditionalization, and heritagization through which cultural objects (whether intangible or not, textual or not, traditional or not) are decontextualized and objectified for further social circulation, valuation, use, and consumption. We are also interested in broadening discussions on the significance of human and non-human bodies, affects, and sensations – all materialities and mediations in themselves – associated with various vernacular practices. Finally, we encourage methodological discussion on how folklore scholars and ethnographers are themselves bound by various (new) media and technologies of documentation, archiving, and presentation.

The forthcoming Young Folklorists welcomes proposals for papers on a range of topics related to materiality and media in the realms of traditional, vernacular, and popular culture, folklore, and heritage. Potential themes for proposals include but are not limited to the following subject areas; that is, papers addressing other issues relevant for contemporary folklore studies are accepted as well.

  • Entanglements of materiality and immateriality, e.g., cultural (heritage) artifacts, artworks, religious and cosmological objects
  • Media, (re)mediation, and mediatization of folklore and vernacular expression, e.g., digital and technological mediation, commercial appropriation, traditionalization as re-mediation
  • Archival and documentary practices and technologies, e.g., digitalization, quantification, big data
  • Sites, environments, spaces, and places of vernacular practice, e.g., social media platforms, virtual spaces
  • Human and non-human bodies, their perceptual, affective, agential, and relational capabilities, and their implications for vernacular practice
  • Multimodal, non-referential, and ritualized aspects of vernacular expression, e.g., performativity, affectivity, technological assemblages
  • (Im)materiality and (im)mediation in the methodology and history of folklore studies
  • Material and embodied aspects of metaphors, e.g., textuality as texture, tradition as handing down
  • Material representations of extra-sensory phenomena, e.g., the afterlife, the otherworld, and their inhabitants
  • Applications in digital, sensory, and auto-ethnography

Submission guidelines

The working language of the conference is English.

Please submit titled abstracts of no more than 250 words for individual papers, along with your name, affiliation, email, and a brief biographical note (2–3 sentences max) to our conference email yofo22@helsinki.fi

We ask you to submit the abstracts

before April 1st, 2022.

Notifications of acceptance or rejection will be sent out by May 6th at the latest.

Depending on the number of participants, the length of individual papers will be between 15 and 20 minutes.

There is no conference fee, but participants are expected to cover their travel and accommodation expenses.

For further information about the conference and the programme, please visit the conference website or contact us at: yofo2022@helsinki.fi

Scientific committee

  • Tuukka Karlsson, Folklore Studies, University of Helsinki and Finnish Literature Society
  • Antti Lindfors, Folklore Studies, University of Helsinki
  • Karina Lukin, Folklore Studies, University of Helsinki
  • Aleksi Moine, Folklore Studies, University of Helsinki
  • Toni Saarinen, Folklore Studies, University of Helsinki
  • Viliina Silvonen, Folklore Studies, Karelian Institute, University of Eastern Finland and Finnish Literature Society

Lieux

  • Helsinki, Finlande

Format de l'événement

Événement uniquement sur site


Dates

  • vendredi 01 avril 2022

Mots-clés

  • folklore study, folklore, materiality, media, mediatisation, culture

Source de l'information

  • Aleksi Moine
    courriel : aleksi [dot] moine [at] helsinki [dot] fi

Licence

CC0-1.0 Cette annonce est mise à disposition selon les termes de la Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universel.

Pour citer cette annonce

« The Stuff of Tradition: Materiality and Media in Folklore Studies », Appel à contribution, Calenda, Publié le lundi 21 mars 2022, https://doi.org/10.58079/18j7

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