Call for papers
Audiovisual culture is a multilayered
field at the center of women's practices of producing, transforming, and
resisting gender identities. Women are constantly interacting with gender norms
through media and audiovisual texts. This symposium addresses women's
representations, power dynamics, and counter-narrative strategies in
audiovisual culture from an interdisciplinary perspective.
Women's relationship with media
representations is not limited to remaining in the position of a passive
spectator; on the contrary, women can develop practices of resistance by
critically interpreting these representations and producing alternative
narratives. For example, Laura Mulvey's theory of the “male gaze”, Judith
Butler's approaches to the performative nature of gender, and Bell Hooks'
critique of the representation of marginalized identities constitute an
important point of reference. Gayatri Spivak's concepts of “sub-representation”
and “silence” and Luce Irigaray's critical approaches to language and
representations are noteworthy in examining women's subjectivization processes
within a broader theoretical framework. In light of similar approaches, how
women question, criticize, and transform social norms will be discussed.
Digital
platforms have created new spaces where women construct their narratives,
challenge gender norms, and redefine their strategies of subjectivation. These
mediums offer a dynamic environment where women's visibility strategies and
resistance practices are produced. In this context, the performative
presentation of gender on digital platforms also brings along women's
visibility strategies and practices of producing counter-hegemonic narratives.
The performative presentation of gender on such platforms and how these
platforms transform gender politics is one of the main problematics of this
symposium.
However,
the manipulative impact of audiovisual culture on women does not mean that
women are merely passive viewers or vulnerable to the effects of these images.
Women have the power to critically interpret, reject, or reinterpret
audiovisual representations. To read Donna Haraway's “cyborg” metaphor, women
engage in the construction of an identity that transcends traditional gender
norms and biological identities. In this context, women's strategies of
producing alternative identities and representations in audiovisual culture
create a space of critique where the boundaries between identity and body are
blurred, resisting the fixed norms of gender.
Audiovisual
culture, of course, also has the power to determine how women are located in
social memory and spatial representations. Especially in the light of Feminist
spatial theories and memory studies, women's representations in public space
and their impact on cultural memory should be examined. The representation of
women in the public and private sphere, the historical and social conditions
under which these representations are produced, and how women reconstruct their
spatial identities will be among the discussion areas of the symposium.
To
summarize, this symposium aims to bring together all studies that question,
criticize and reconstruct the place of women in audiovisual culture and to
reevaluate the potential of women to develop an alternative discourse in visual
culture within the framework of feminist theories. With this aim, issues,
conflicts, approaches, opportunities and threats related to women in culture
will be discussed.
It is open to all participants; artists,
researchers, academics, creators, who want to share their thoughts and findings
on audiovisual culture, which reproduces gender roles with its dynamics that
shape and reflect social behavior norms, perceptions and attitudes, and at the
same time direct them, to make the invisible visible. We look forward to
meeting at the “2nd International Symposium on Women in Audiovisual Culture”
with the following topics and titles.
Being Visible is Not Enough!
Women's alternative narrative production
practices and digital activism on digital platforms (YouTube, Instagram,
Facebook, Podcasts, etc.)
Aesthetic Rebellion: Women's Signature
in Art
Women's invisible labor in art and media
production and processes of cultural restructuring
Women in the Frame of Daily Life: Redefining
Representation
Women's dynamic and resistant relations
with audiovisual representations in everyday life
Narratives Crossing Borders with Digital
Media Activism!
The global impact of digital feminist
activism and the reconstruction of gender identities by digital platforms
The Power of the Image: How
Representations of Women Transform Social and Cultural Narratives
Socio-cultural and political effects of
representations of women
They are not only visible, they are
transforming!
The transformative power of women
activists on audiovisual culture and examples
Whose Memory? Memory
Spaces of Cultural Heritage and Women
Opportunities for women to shape a
gender perspective in cultural heritage and memory policies
The gaze is ours! Norms
and Debates on the Representation of the Female Body!
Questioning social norms on the
representation of the female body and eye/ gaze regimes
The Commercialization of the Image: Representations
of Women and Bright Traps in Post-Feminist Media
The commodification of the female image
in post-feminist media and the dilemmas created by these images
Battles of Subjectivity: The
Construction of Identities in Visual Culture Beyond Biopolitical and
Technological Norms
Discussions and possibilities for the
construction of female subjectivity in audiovisual culture by transcending its
biopolitical and technological boundaries
Space and Women: Who
Determines the Status of Women in Representations of Public and Private Space?
Questioning the dynamics of women's
representations of public and private space
Discourse Wars: Women
in Popular Culture, Struggle for Identity and Ideology
The ideological struggle of gender
discourses in audiovisual culture for the past, present, and future
Reorganizing Meaning: Transforming
Symbols and Metaphors in Audiovisual Culture
Women's meaning-making processes through
symbols and metaphors in audiovisual culture