University College Dublin | An Coláiste Ollscoile, Baile Átha Cliath

UCD, Belfield, Dublin 4, Ireland | Director: Professor Liam Kennedy

Summer School 2008

Summer School 2008

CALL FOR PAPERS: Conflicting Views: Visual Culture, Conflict and Northern Ireland

Institute of Art, Design & Technology, Dun Laoghaire, Dublin
Dates: June 9th – 11th   2010.

The School of Creative Arts and the Institute of Art, Design & Technology, Dun Laoghaire, Dublin, are pleased to announce that they will be hosting a three day conference on Visual Culture, Conflict and Northern Ireland in June 2010.

During the last decade of the ‘peace process’, the visual arts have been identified within official policy as playing a crucial role in peace-building across communities and the official ‘public’ spaces of post-conflict Northern Ireland. While the merits of such policy in particular, and the realities of the designation ‘post-conflict’ in general have been open to much debate, the role of visual culture in areas such as cultural memory, ethics, human rights and political activism have generated a range of responses from scholars, photographers, visual arts practitioners, curators and community based activists working through a range of disciplines. While the organizers are interested in papers exploring these debates, papers examining any aspect of the visual culture of conflict in Northern Ireland are also particularly welcome.

Proposals are invited for 20 minute presentations on themes broadly related to the representation of conflict and Northern Ireland from scholars and practitioners working across the arts, humanities and the social sciences. The range of topics and disciplinary approaches are open and the organizers particularly welcome proposals from visual arts practitioners working across community based projects, activism, ethics, justice and civil rights. Topics relating to conflict in Northern Ireland may include but are not limited to;

Confirmed speakers include

Professor Paul Seawright (University of Ulster), publications include, Inside Information, Photographers Gallery; Hidden, Imperial War Museum; Field Notes, Foto Museum Antwerp; Invisible Cities, FfotoGallery.

Tom Herron (Leeds Metropolitan University) & John Lynch (University of Birmingham), authors of After Bloody Sunday: Representation, Ethics, Justice, Cork University Press.

Anthony Haughey (DIT), publications include Disputed Territory; The Edge of Europe.

More speakers are likely to be added shortly, please check back to see updates.

Proposals of 250-300 words together with a short bio and institutional affiliation should be forwarded to Justin Carville; justin.carville@iadt.ie

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