[spectre] (fwd) CFP: Creative Dissent: Alternative Cultures during Socialism and Beyond, 1945-1991
Andreas Broeckmann
ab at mikro.in-berlin.de
Fri Jun 7 07:39:48 CEST 2019
From: Katalin Cseh-Varga
Date: Jun 6, 2019
Subject: CFP: Creative Dissent: Alternative Cultures during Socialism
and Beyond, 1945-1991
Deadline: Jun 30, 2019
Edited volume with the working title:
Creative Dissent: Alternative Cultures during Socialism and Beyond,
1945-1991
Editors: Katalin Cseh-Varga, Martin Klimke, Burcu Peksevgen, Rolf
Werenskjold and Marko Zubak
The comprehensive regulation of all sectors of society in the socialist
states in Central, Eastern and Southeast Europe during the Cold War was
not always a successful undertaking. Dissenting and disobedient voices
that opposed or ignored Party directives emerged within the political,
social and cultural spheres of Warsaw Pact countries, frequently
circumventing official spaces and obstructing the creation and
functioning of state-sanctioned, class-conscious communities. This
proposed volume seeks to explore the origins, practices, and
transformations over time of alternative cultures in socialist Europe.
Ordinary people, intellectuals and cultural players responded to
repression and control with creativity and inventiveness. In Yugoslavia,
for instance, alternative youth culture flourished, creating a parallel
universe to the highly politicized official culture. In Lithuania, to
satisfy the intellectual hunger for thought other than orthodox Leftism,
dissidents engaged with texts of the Daoist and Zen (Chan) Buddhist
traditions. Artists in Romania built their own mail-art network to
connect with like-minded artists from within and beyond the Iron
Curtain. And self-publishing became a widely practiced mode of knowledge
distribution outside of Party-run media.
What kind of grassroots or institutionalized protest phenomena are we
dealing with in the alternative cultures of dissent in the Soviet and
socialist influence zone? How did alternative cultures vary from country
to country? And how were they different from their “Western”
counterparts? Also, how do these socialist alternative cultures connect
to other international/global perspectives?
We seek contributions that will center around the following three main
focus areas: alternative information networks and transfers, virtual and
physical spaces of dissent, and communities of disobedience.
With regard to these focus areas, we are seeking essays that aim to
answer the following questions:
- What are the main genealogical, historiographical and methodical
questions we need to ask about alternative culture during socialism?
- What were the origins of opposition in the decades previous to the
Cold War and how did they (if at all) differ during the Cold War? And
how did modes of opposition change after the socialist states’ turn
towards democracy in the 1990s?
- How much was grassroots or institutionalized dissent determined by
cultural transfer and the transmission of ideas across various borders?
- What kinds of dissidents and representatives of cultural dissent were
referenced in non-socialist foreign media and publications?
- What were the “in-betweens” (or grey zones) in which dissent
manifested itself, what actions did it generate, and what impact did it
produce? How was dissent interlinked with officially sanctioned cultural
forms of expression, its institutions and media?
- How can we deconstruct the role of gatekeepers, myths, images, canons
and borders in the history of alternative cultures?
Please send us an extended abstract of your proposed contribution (500
words), with a brief bio (200 words) that also includes your name,
affiliation and email address.
The editors will invite selected authors to present their papers at a
publication workshop to be scheduled in 2020 in preparation for the volume.
Email submissions to creativedissent2020 at gmail.com until June 30, 2019.
Reference / Quellennachweis:
CFP: Creative Dissent: Alternative Cultures during Socialism and Beyond,
1945-1991. In: ArtHist.net, Jun 6, 2019.
<https://arthist.net/archive/21015>.
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