SCREEN-L Archives

March 2004, Week 3

SCREEN-L@LISTSERV.UA.EDU

Options: Use Monospaced Font
Show Text Part by Default
Show All Mail Headers

Message: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Topic: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Author: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]

Print Reply
Subject:
From:
Reply To:
Date:
Sun, 14 Mar 2004 23:23:31 -0500
Content-Type:
text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (84 lines)
The editors of *Invisible Culture* are pleased to announce the release of

*ISSUE 7: Casting Doubt*

Guest Edited by Leanne Gilbertson and Elizabeth Kalbfleisch

Available online at:
http://www.rochester.edu/in_visible_culture/ivchome.html

The essays in this issue of *Invisible Culture* testify to the
significance of doubt as a subject worthy of sustained inquiry, as a mode
of analysis, and as a keystone of visual studies. In the last few years we
have witnessed how quickly and thoroughly a culture may mobilize resources
when confronted with circumstances of indeterminate or incomprehensible
meaning.  We have become increasingly aware of how doubtful moments and
images are exploited in order to perpetuate fear.  We have seen firsthand
how the residue and remains of doubtful encounters may be cast off,
smoothed over, or swept away--and the shocking speed and awesome force
with which this occurs.  In response to dominant cultural reactions to
uncertainty, this collection reclaims the positive productivity of the
fleeting, dispersed, and frequently isolating experiences of doubt by
drawing together a range of work dedicated to interrogating its
manifestations.

Contributors to this issue explore doubt in relationship to varied media,
cultural location, and methodology, including photography, contemporary
art, film, Surrealist literature, psychoanalysis, and political
propaganda. This issue of _Invisible Culture_ brings questions surrounding
doubt into focus, casting doubt by arranging the prevalent, often unspoken
and invisible phenomena of doubting into a meaningful and previously
unimagined constellation.

The articles included in this issue are:
The Image Before Me
By Peter Hobbs

The Automatic Hand: Spiritualism, Psychoanalysis, Surrealism
By Rachel Leah Thompson

The Naked Truth or the Shadow of Doubt? X-Rays and the Problematic of
Transparency
By Corey Keller

Real Lies, True Fakes, and Supermodels
By Elizabeth Mangini

"Eat it alive and swallow it whole!": Resavoring *Cannibal Holocaust* as a
Mockumentary
By Carolina Gabriela Jauregui

Leaflet Drop: The Paper Landscape of War
By Jennifer Gabrys

______________________________________________________
Past issues of  *Invisible Culture*  include: "Visual Publics, Visible
Publics" (Issue 6); "Visual Culture and National Identity" (Issue 5); "To
Incorporate Practice" (Issue 4); "Time and the Work" (Issue 3);
"Interrogating Subcultures" (Issue 2); and "The Worlding of Cultural
Studies" (Issue 1).

*Invisible Culture* has been in operation since 1998, in association with
the Visual and Cultural Studies Program at the University of Rochester.
The present editors, Margot Bouman, Lucy Curzon, T'ai Smith, and Catherine
Zuromskis, have revised the journal's original mission statement, with the
goal of reaching a broader range of disciplines. The journal is dedicated
to explorations of the material and political dimensions of cultural
practices: the means by which cultural objects and communities are
produced, the historical contexts in which they emerge, and the regimes of
knowledge or modes of social interaction to which they contribute.

As the title suggests, *Invisible Culture* problematizes the unquestioned
alliance between culture and visibility, specifically visual culture and
vision. Cultural practices and materials emerge not solely in the visible
world, but also in the social, temporal, and theoretical relations that
define the invisible. Our understanding of Cultural Studies, finally,
maintains that culture is fugitive and is constantly renegotiated.

 *Invisible Culture* accepts book, film, media, and art review submissions
of 600 to 1000 words.

----
Screen-L is sponsored by the Telecommunication & Film Dept., the
University of Alabama: http://www.tcf.ua.edu

ATOM RSS1 RSS2