Call for Papers: After the New Art History (Birmingham, 26-27 Mar 2012)

September 21, 2020
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Call for Papers

After the New Art History (Birmingham, 26-27 Mar 2012)

University of Birmingham, March 26 - 27, 2012

Deadline: Nov 11, 2020

Keynote Speakers: Griselda Pollock and Whitney Davis

The term ‘new art history’ has long been an established (although contentious) part of the critical lexicon of the art historical discipline. Associated with the pioneering social and feminist art histories of T J Clark and Griselda Pollock of the 1970s (expanding in subsequent decades to encompass post-colonial, Freudian, post-Freudian and wider gender-studies approaches), it denoted a conceptual shift that foregrounded the dependence of intellectual inquiry on a priori ideological / political values.

In recent years such interlinking has been undermined in a number of ways. Embryonic discourses such as neuro-art history, environmental approaches to art and neo-Darwinian accounts have sought to create alternative ‘objective,’ ‘scientific’ and depoliticised paradigms of inquiry. On the other hand, it has been seen as insufficiently self-critical; for many proponents of visual studies its institutional success has led to a blunted vision, in which the value of basic categories, such as ‘art’ allegedly remain uninterrogated.

Finally, growing external political pressures on the Academy, which have been focused on instrumentalising art history, are potentially threatening to turn the discipline into a service industry for the market, stripping it of its force as a mode of radical social, aesthetic and cultural inquiry.

This conference will examine the state and futures of radical art history within this context. What has been gained for the discipline over the past 40 years, and what are the dangers for these gains in the present? What are the current challenges for radical art history, and how are they being met?

Proposals are invited for papers that address topics related to the conceptual, ideological and institutional state of contemporary art history, in particular, the fate of the so-called ‘new’ art history.

This conference will be held at the University of Birmingham in conjunction with the Journal of Art Historiography.

Proposals should be addressed to Matthew Rampley (m.j.rampley@bham.ac.uk)

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