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From: Dominic McIver Lopes <[email protected]>
To: news <[email protected]>
Sent: Fri, Aug 30, 2013 2:30 pm
Subject: [AE] Fwd: CFP: 'The Digital Subject'.

Begin forwarded message:
From: Dominic Smith &lt;[email protected]&gt;
Subject: CFP: 'The Digital Subject'.

Date: 30 August, 2013 8:23:21 PDT



Dear All,



Please see the following call for papers, which may be of interest to
list
members.



ENGLISH Call for papers



International symposium: bThe digital subject: B In-scription,

Ex-scription, Tele-scriptionb



University of Paris 8 Vincennes Saint-Denis, Archives nationales,
November

18-21, 2013



Organizers:



Pierre Cassou-NoguC(s (Department of philosophy, LLCP, SPHERE, EA 4008)



Claire Larsonneur (Department of anglophone studies, Le Texte C tranger,

EA1569)



Arnaud Regnauld (Department of anglophone studies, CRLC b Research
Center

on Literature and Cognition, EA1569)





This symposium is part of a long-term project, bThe digital subject,b

endorsed by the LABEX Arts-H2H (http://www.labex-arts-h2h.fr/) and
follows

a first symposium on Hypermnesia held in 2012. B We are exploring the
ways

in which digital tools, be they real or fictional, from Babbage to

Internet, have altered our conception of the subject and its

representations, affecting both its status and its attributes. We
welcome

contributions from the following fields : philosophy, literature, arts,

archivistics, neurosciences, and the history of science and technology.



The working languages will be French and English. Contributions may be

submitted in either language and should not exceed 3000 characters.
Please

enclose a brief bio-bibliographical note.



Please submit your abstracts via EasyChair:

https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=digitalsubject2013

Do not forget to upload your document in PDF format.



For further information, you may write to [email protected].

Deadline for submissions: September 15, 2013.

Contributors will be informed of the scientific committeebs decision by

October 1, 2013.



Opening keynote by Mark Amerika: Nov. 18th, 8-10:30 PM at Conservatoire

National SupC)rieur d'Art Dramatique



Keynote Speakers : Jean-Luc Nancy, Bertrand Gervais (UQAM, MontrC)al),

Wendy Chun (Brown University), Laurent Cohen (SalpC*triC(re INSERM).



How is writing revisited by digital media? In what ways does the digital

turn affect the three dimensions embedded in writing: the production of
an

artefact, the crafting of meaning and the advent of the subject? We aim
at

investigating this new field of research from a variety of points of
view

such as philosophy, arts, neurosciences and archiving and welcome

contributions from researchers in all those fields.

With digital technologies writing shifts from paper to a screen or a

network of screens. But this is no move into a virtual world: writing is

still a gesture, the body is still at writing, still acting under a set
of

constraints, just different ones. And that shift goes much further than
a

rewriting of rules. It entails transcribing, usually through digital

duplicates or reencoding. It paves the way for what we might call

tele-scription, writing at a remove via a technical device, exposing the

fallacy of immediacy and introducing another strata of mediation in the

process of writing.

bExscription passes through writing b and certainly not through the

ecstasies of flesh or meaning. And so we have to write from a body that
we

neither have nor are, but where being is exscribed. If I write, this

strange hand has already slipped into my writing hand.b (Jean-Luc Nancy,

Corpus, Richard A. Rand trans., New York, NY: Fordham UP, 2008, p.19).

Writing ex-scribes. Works from another edge. Of course writing is about

describing things or states of affairs but it also points to another

dimension, that of exscription. Can digital tele-scription be viewed as
a

form of exscription, spacing out the subject as posited by Nancy or

Derrida? Or is digital tele-scription to be understood in the light of
the

changes it introduces in our relationship to time, and from there on,

explored as an entirely novel phenomenon? Will it bring about a radical

upheaval of the relations between such notions as writing, technology,
the

body, the subject?

Digital writing is a brand new world we are barely beginning to explore.

See for instance all the second-thoughts of writing, the words crossed

out, erased and overwritten, all the editing process which we now keep

track of: our traces and drafts are no longer set in their ways but

potentially continuously evolving. Will such an instability affect how
the

subject relates to the traces she leaves, the meanings she construes,
her

own definition of self? Digital media also revisits our distinction

between the original and the copy: once digitized, the trace we inscribe

may be reproduced ad libitum, much like a manuscript fans out through
the

production of fac-similes. That trace may also be augmented through

tagging, commentaries and linking. Inscription is no longer the one-off

act of a single author but a process entailing various forms of

reencoding, transposing, adding, categorising, a whole array of human
and

technological interventions. Or take this emblematic sign of personal

identity, the signature, and see how it is now interfaced and multiform.

What used to be the most intimate, chosen mark of our self is now
devolved

to sets of electronic sequences, usually encoded, sometimes
automatically

generated, at times delegated, occasionally even produced without our

prior knowledge. This is no trifling matter: will the subject, through

these new technologies of self-inscription, turn into an avatar? What
new

interplay between the individual and the institutions (libraries,

archives, universities) arises through this collective writing process?

One may also consider the legal consequences for the atomised self, who

finds herself encoded into binary data within the cloud, and whose
history

is archived and exposed publicly to an extent she may not control. How
is

tele-scription played out in fiction, in arts or in our daily activities

(such as email)? Where does it come from? How and why was it
established?

What are its uses? And crucially, what does it change bif indeed it

changes anythingb in the relation of the subject and her body to
writing?

Could tele-scription renew our understanding of what constitutes a

subject?

In-scription then. Or re-inscription. While writing shifts to the
screen,

another major contemporary trend, fuelled by the advances of
neuroscience

and medical imagery, re-ascribes the advent of meaning to the body, more

specifically to the brain which is to be made legible. Reading the mind
by

reading the brain, drawing from what we can now access in terms of

neuronal activity, this is largely today's scientific agenda. A number
of

recent experiments in neuroscience focus on imagination and on how
humans

craft fiction. Some may try to catch what we do as we dream, or as we
let

our thoughts roam free; some intend to detect lie; some strive to build
a

bbrain reading machineb which would ideally display on screen all that

goes on inside our minds. It all rests upon the assumption that who the

person really is, her intentions, the images she likes, her biases, even

that part of her she may not be aware of, are inscribed in her brain,
set

into patterns we do not have direct access to but that a machine may
read

and decipher. What is happening in the field of neuroscience and how is
it

echoed in fiction? For fiction b literature, the cinema, philosophical

thought experiments, all these traditions that largely pre-date

neuroscience b provide us with the tools to explore the workings of the

mind through the body of the subject. How can we make sense of this

re-inscription, being contemporary to digital
tele-scription?_______________________________________________
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