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Call for Papers

Theme: Whose Tradition?
Type: 2014 Biennial Conference
Institution: International Association for the Study of Traditional
Environments (IASTE)
   Universiti Putra Malaysia (UPM)
Location: Kuala Lumpur (Malaysia)
Date: 14.–17.12.2014
Deadline: 17.2.2014

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Past IASTE conferences have called on scholars to consider
tradition’s relationship to development, utopia, and most recently,
myth. In response, scholars have advanced multiple perspectives
regarding the construction of traditions in space and place. These
discussions necessarily involve the dimension of time. Utopia implies
the construction of a future ideal, whether religious or
philosophical, while myth attempts to discover the origins of
history, whether in the imagination or in reality. While myth usually
invokes an invented past and utopia imagines an alternative future,
the dimension of time is paramount. Thus, traditions are revealed
never to be the static legacy of the past, but rather a project for
its dynamic reinterpretation in the service of the present and the
future. To understand how traditions are tied to notions of time and
space, it is thus important to consider their subjectivity,
authorship, and power. Behind the construction or deconstruction of
any tradition also lies the subject, whose interests in the present
are often hidden. To reveal this process of agency, one may ask:
tradition, by whom?

In examining themes of authorship and subjectivity, this conference
will seek to uncover in what manner, for what reason, by whom, to
what effect, and during what intervals traditions have been deployed
with regard to the built environment. Our current period of
globalization has led to the flexible reinterpretation of traditions
via the mass media for reasons of power and profit. A proliferation
of environments, for example, adopt traditional forms of one place
and period in a completely different contextual setting, while new
design traditions may privilege image over experience. At the same
time, the advent of new mobile technologies with the power to
compress and distort traditional configurations of space and time has
allowed for the flourishing of new, empowering practices. Such
practices have led to new traditions of urban resistance and
uprisings that travel fluidly between such diverse locales as Sao
Paolo and Istanbul, Madrid and Cairo, and give voice to certain
populations previously excluded. Questions of power, the other, and
changing configurations of time and space will open up discussions of
the ways in which traditional practices shape the histories and
futures of built environments.

As in past IASTE conferences, scholars and practitioners from
architecture, architectural history, art history, anthropology,
archeology, folklore, geography, history, planning, sociology, urban
studies, and related disciplines are invited to submit papers that
address one of the following tracks:

Track I. WHO: Power and the Construction of Traditions

Questioning ownership and authority of dominant traditions deployed
in the making of space is an essential first step. The historical
development of any tradition displays patterns of selection that
either negate or celebrate certain forms and practices. Which
narratives become privileged in spatial practices and to what end?
What are the politics of ‘choosing’ traditions, manufacturing or
creating them? Further, what is omitted, negated, or silenced in the
interest of those in power at any moment? Thus, to understand the
transmission of traditions between generations, it is essential to
examine linkages between tradition, authority, and power. Papers in
this track should address traditions that are ‘produced’ and
transmitted or deployed across time and place. Papers should consider
spaces and practices that have been created, adopted, or invoked by
certain social groups and/or governments for specific purposes.

Track II. WHAT: Place and the Anchoring of Traditions

In order to examine how traditions are manifest in space and time, it
is important to consider which versions, particularities, or
specificities of tradition emerge and are subsequently anchored in
specific places. Understanding where traditions are established in
built form and practice is equally as important as understanding
whose traditions are privileged. For example, Southeast Asia and
other parts of the world are witnessing a revival of urban
agriculture which will no doubt influence the future urban form of
our cities. How can new settlements incorporate the demands of food
security and urban agriculture within their complex infrastructure
and eco-systems? In Track II, papers should actively explore
hegemonic spatial practices and their alternatives that either adopt
or challenge and contest standard configurations of power and
authority. For example, how have disadvantaged groups left out of
dominant spatial traditions created their own traditions? How are
such these spatial practices transmitted? And how do they subvert
established norms, allowing new voices to enter and gain legitimacy?
Papers in this track should explore how traditions are anchored in
place.

Track III. WHERE: Mobility and the Reimagination of Traditions

In a rapidly changing postglobal world, traditions cease to be fixed
or attached to given places for very long. The mobile nature of
contemporary traditions can negate past forms of ownership and
authorship that assumed a top-down power structure that privileged an
elite. The celebrations and ways of one culture may be popularized
through adoption by others. In many cases, this results in
commodification and a loss of original referents. In others, a
tradition common to neighboring geographies and communities may be
strategically claimed by a distinct subaltern or minority group for
political purposes. Technologies of reproducibility, such as
photography, radio, film, TV, and advertising, have undermined the
placed-based nature of traditions, allowing flexible interpretations
as well as the creation of new meanings. In fact, the mass media have
created their own traditions. The advent of the internet and wireless
media has further facilitated new interpretations of traditions, with
flexible temporalities and places. Papers in this track should
consider the emergence and establishment of new mobile traditions and
their possibility for both disruption and foreclosure.

Abstract due date: February 17, 2014

For further information please visit the conference website:
http://iaste.berkeley.edu/conferences/105.html


Contact:

IASTE 2014
Center for Environmental Design Research
390 Wurster Hall #1839
University of California
Berkeley, CA 94720-1839
USA
Phone: +1 510 642.6801
Fax:   +1 510 643.5571
Email: ia...@berkeley.edu
Web: http://iaste.berkeley.edu/conferences/105.html




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