Tuesday, September 13, 2005

Streetnotes Winter 2006

Xcp Website is collecting STREETNOTES for its WINTER 2006 Exhibition.

Heterotopia: Festival & Disaster

Streets and public places are not always stable environments. Signals, codes, mores and customs change. Space is socially constructed. At times, extraordinary change brings cataclysmic disruption. Normalcy can be suspended and the apparent meanings of social spaces can be altered. In times of festival and other effervescent assemblies, the normative patterns of the streets can also dramatically change. New rules and new roles may appear. However, because the street is a dynamic social place, its normative patterns, and the concept of normalcy itself are always in contention and social mediated. This issue of Streetnotes looks at how disruptions and interventions can both disintegrate and renew social conceptions of public place. We are interested in accounts of slow and procedural disasters as well as the instant. We are concerned with momentary revelries and micro-social fissures in the status quo as well as the wider carnivalesque. In the Winter 2006 issue, we seek documentary, poetic, and ethnographic accounts of the “street” as heterotopia, a concept Michel Foucault described as a place "capable of juxtaposing in a real place several spaces, several sites that are incompatible." ("Of Other Spaces" Diacritics v16 n1)


About Xcp: Streetnotes:
Xcp: Streetnotes is a biannual online exhibition of the socially descriptive arts. We accept essays, experimental documentary, photography and poetry. We are especially interested in ethnographic and geographic description, interviews, and other products of field work conducted in and about the street or public places. Exhibitions of Streetnotes have been published on the internet biannually since 1998. Past exhibits have been saved and are accessible.

Guidelines:
Please send text documents as rich text format documents (*.rtf), MS Word (*.doc) or as ascii files (*.txt).
Images should be sent as jpeg file (*.jpg) set to 72 dpi and sized no larger than 800 x 600 pxls. html files are also ok, but please do not include animation, javascripts, or other programming. We are unable to publish video or sound at this time. Please visit our site to see past contributions: http://www.xcp.bfn.org or write the editor with questions, David Michalski: michalski@ucdavis.edu

Deadline: November 15, 2005.
Estimate publication date : January 1, 2006.

Please send electronic materials to:
David Michalski, michalski@ucdavis.edu
Please also place “Xcp” is the subject line.

Diskettes (PC) and Hardcopies can be sent to:

David Michalski
Humanities and Social Sciences Dept.
288 Shields Library, 100 NW Quad
University of California,
Davis, CA 95616
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Xcp: Streetnotes is part of the Xcp: Cross Cultural Poetics Website.
We are hosted by the Buffalo Freenet, a not-for-profit, community based information service.

Monday, September 12, 2005

Diasporic Hegemonies Project

Diasporic Hegemonies Project

Symposium: Gendering the Diaspora, Race-ing the Transnational

Diasporic Hegemonies is a three-year scholarly and pedagogical project designed by Women’s Studies Associate Professor Tina Campt, and Assistant Professor of Cultural Anthropology, Deborah Thomasto facilitate communication between those doing transnational feminist research and feminist scholars of African Diaspora. They have developed this project in order to study with other scholars the ways transnational feminist scholarship might benefit from a more engaged dialogue with those who work on the African diaspora, and how the study of diaspora and diasporic communities might be transformed through a more directed engagement with feminist transnationalism, and particularly the work of feminists theorizing other models of diaspora (for example, South Asian or Asian American diasporas). Campt and Thomas believe a gendered transnational analysis of the relations of Diaspora could ultimately transform the ways scholars, students, and policy-makers conceptualize current processes of globalization, and could therefore help to undergird critically engaged responses to these processes.

Fall Symposium, November 17-19: Gendering Diaspora and Race-ing the Transnational
Panels and keynotes in the Richard White Auditorium on East Campus. For more information please contact Pat Hoffman at phoffman@duke.edu. Admission is free, but registration is required.

Friday, September 09, 2005

Expo for the Artist| Expo for the Musician : Sixth Annual Expo for the Artist & Musician

Sixth Annual Expo for the Artist & Musician

What?
The Sixth Annual Expo for the Artist & Musician

EXPO FOR THE ARTIST & MUSICIAN supports the arts at the community level by offering free and very-low-cost networking events, workshops, exhibitions, performances, discussion groups, community advocacy, and arts promotions via print and online resources.

Neither a job fair nor a business convention, the Expo is the only event of its kind, each year bringing together more than 90 galleries, radio stations, recording studios, performance troupes, schools, nonprofits, small businesses and service groups to meet the community, share resources, and cultivate the arts from the grassroots up.


How Much?
$2 suggested donation -- no one turned away for lack of funds.

When?
Saturday, September 10, 2005, 11:00 am-6:00 pm

Where?
SomArts Gallery, 934 Brannan St. (x 8th St.), San Francisco CA 94103

Friday, September 02, 2005

Word For/ Word: A Journal of New Writing

Please visit this important online journal for new writing...
Word for/ Word