Istanbul. City Portrait
International
Conference
Call for papers
February 29th
– March 1st 2012
Venice, Italy
deadline: by November 17th
Within the cycle of
International Conferences ‘City
Portraits’, organized by the School of Doctorate Studies, Universitą
Iuav di Venezia, on February 29th – March 1st 2012
it will be held one about the city of Istanbul.
The goal of the
International Conference is to provide a wide range of point of view in order
to investigate the current transformations of the city and to attempt a better
understanding of its coming evolutions based on an interdisciplinary approach,
which ranges from the urban planning, historical and contemporary architectural
issues to arts, design and cultural policies. PhD candidates and young researcher
(under 40 years old at the time the conference will be held), who have
developed original studies or projects on specific case-studies linked with one
or more of the following three sessions, are invited to submit their
contributions.
1. City
& Architecture
Istanbul is one of the
world’s largest city and one of the oldest. It has deep roots in its
glorious past and it’s trying to
look at to its future after the transformations in the 80’s along with the
globalization process that picked up speed bringing with it deep change in the
urban and architectural context.
The goal of this
session is to provide a critical point of view on the city of Istanbul through
the following main issues:
- the role of Mimar
Sinan and his works in shaping Istanbul;
- the tight
relationship between foreign architects/urban planners and the transformations
occurred in the city after the declaration of the Republic of Turkey in 1923;
- issues linked with
the contemporary architecture debate considering that the city is still
suffering because of a very quick development
occurred in the last decades.
Suggested topics include but are not limited
to:
Mimar Sinan
Hinge city
The speed of a change
The survival of public
spaces
Urban transformations
2. City
& Society
During the 80s,
Istanbul begins to reveal new regimes of regulation for these governments that
created new financial sources, allowed the opening for a stock exchange market
and creating a new metropolitan government, that transformed the city into a
competitive global city region.
New wealth engendered
new social groups, while traditional wealthy groups (public sector professions
like teachers, writers, bureaucrats and trade unionists) experienced an
identity crisis and loss of public confidence. This new sense of ownership of
new groups (symbolical and material) is today clearly mirrored by spatial
polarization of poverty increasingly suburbanized (which its especially
migrants), but even displayed by more soft and intangible forms of alienation
and marginalization challenging the issue of citizenship. By exploring
critically the image of the “globalizing Istanbul”, the session
encourage papers that focus on a range of social practices in the city of
Istanbul trough which citizenship is enacted “anew” and will consider
implications of such enactments for understanding organization of local
welfare, highlighting relational aspects of citizenship that lead to positive
or negative consequences for civil society.
Suggested topics include but are not limited
to:
Emerging new social
groups
Forms of citizenship
Spatial Practices and
the Production of Urban Space
Local welfare
3. City
& Culture
A great impulse for Istanbul's growing role as a cultural, political and economic arena is due to its candidature as European Capital of Culture in 2010. In this respect, this session highlights the rapid development of the arts and design scene and the blossoming of museums and cultural institutions (such as galleries, libraries and archives) dedicated to contemporary arts, which are closely linked with a rethinking of the dynamics and interrelations with the urban environment and its citizens. Therefore, what are the connections between the cultural production of today and the so called creative industries (especially the design and film industries)? How is the city represented and questioned through visual arts (photography, new media, graphics design)? How is the image of the city communicated?
Suggested topics include but are not limited
to:
Heritage policies:
pluralism, nationalism, minorities
Representing the
cultural heritage
Arts and creativity in
public spaces
Istanbul Biennials
Museums as a space of
collecting, shaping memories or creating intercultural dialogues
Design as practice,
discipline and culture
Creative industries
Abstract
guidelines
PhD candidates and
young researcher (that are under 40 years old at the time the conference will
be held) interested in presenting a paper should submit an abstract of maximum
400 words in English language by
November 17th 2011.
Abstracts should be sent via e-mail to istanbulcityportrait@gmail.com.
Please include the
following information: full name, date of birth, affiliation
(university/institution), e-mail address, thesis supervisor, working title of
the dissertation, four keywords. In the email subject please write the session
you want to participate to.
The curators of the
International Conference, taking into account the interest of the themes
proposed, will select the papers to be presented during the conference and
notify the authors via e-mail
by November 22th.
Call
for paper key dates
|
Call for
paper launch October
17th 2011 |
Deadline
for abstract submission November
17th 2011 |
Notification
of acceptance November
22th 2011 |
The
curators
Teresita Scalco
Moira Valeri
Marco Vani
for
more information
istanbulcityportrait@gmail.com
