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EVENT Oct 31
ABSTRACT Aug 15
Abstract days left 0
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Call for Chapter Proposals Why Collage? Anthropology and Art in a Fragmented World

Categories: Popular Culture, Aesthetics, Anthropology/Sociology, Cultural Studies, Environmental Studies, Film, TV, & Media, Food Studies, History, Philosophy, Science, Miscellaneous
Event Date: 2025-10-31 Abstract Due: 2025-08-15

Call for Chapter Proposals 

Why Collage? Anthropology and Art in a Fragmented World

 


Edited by Cathy Greenhalgh and Susan Falls

 

We are currently seeking chapter proposals for work to be included in a book on the anthropology of collage (in relation to and as against assemblage and montage and within multi-modal approaches).  Collage (digital and analogue) as both material and method offers radical approaches to construction and fieldwork, especially with difficult subjects and collaboration. Collage continues to be under-theorised whilst many anthropologists and artists are using it as technique. Issues of justice, ecology, and identity can be well served by using functions of collage: for example deliberate appropriation, cut-up, layered and juxtaposed components, elements of the surreal, absurd and disjunctive use of recycled, waste or previously less visible shaping. Collage has been noted in its use for therapeutic and community empowerment and activism (Farebrother, 2009; Kanyer, 2021) and to be effective in revealing the operations of ‘undercommons’ knowledges (Stefano and Moten, 2023). Collage has arisen at times of war, pandemic, collapse and trauma (Banash, 2013; Etgar, 2017; Flood et al 2009). Collage can be cheap to produce, require minimal expertise and therefore can be realised between multiple collaborators and co-authors. This is also why it is often not taken seriously or used as simple ‘decor’, but it can also reveal assumptions, undermine persistent stories, and establish new historiography. This can be a way of building community, rethinking cultural ancestry, and acknowledging equality of different sources of information and knowledge. Material processes can be seen as collaging events and used to point to relationships with the non-human and environmental infrastructure. Collage is a “bordering” mechanism uncovering movement and networks of displacement.

 

We are envisioning a book that contains approximately 20 chapters of up to 5000 words each plus an image allowance (which could also be displayed in an experimental manner). 

 

Proposals for chapters should include a title, an abstract between 250-350 words, one image, and your brief bio (no more than 100 words).  

 

Please send materials to sfalls@scad.edu and cathygr eenhalghcinema@gmail.com

 

The deadline to submit proposals is August 15th, 2025.

 

Very best regards,

 

Cathy Greenhalgh & Susan Falls

falls.susan@gmail.com

Susan Falls