[Archport] Agrade ç o divulga çã o na Archport - abra ç o
Title: Agradeço divulgação na Archport - abraço
CALL for papers – pedido de sugestões de colaboração
TAG 2008 UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHAMPTON, UK
web page:
http://www.tagconference.org/2008
TAG30
2008
The 30th Theoretical Archaeology Group annual meeting will be held at the Department of Archaeology at the University of Southampton between Monday December 15th and Wednesday December 17th 2008.
Session:
Desires from the past: what do archaeological images want?
Vítor Oliveira Jorge [University of Porto; CEAUCP; e-mail: vojorge@clix.pt ]
Inspired in J. Lacan, Slavoj Zizek wrote (“Looking Awry”, The MIT Press, 1992): “When I look at an object, the object is always already gazing at me, and from a point at which I can not see it.”
And he adds that, if this antinomy - of my view and of the gaze that the object devolves to me - disappears, I am caught in a kind of "pornographic" environment: “reality” approaches too close and in all its details.
I need a distance between that “reality” and fantasy in order to articulate my desire (in this case, my desire of understanding what we have conventionally accepted to be the “archaeological reality”).
Knowledge implies not a frontal, straightforward view, but an “awry look” at things. That look does not seek some kind of “hidden meaning” in the objects, from which to extract a product called “past”.
But in a way, add by lots of tools, including images, what we want is to establish a narrative that, being ultimately "fictional" (truth is a divine monopoly), increases some sense to our lives as temporal beings.
Photography, then cinema or video, and many other image technologies have been, and increasingly are, intimately connected to our desire of “looking at the past.”
Or is it that, alternatively, the past is already looking at us, gazing at us? The question remains open.
This subject is, I think, a good topic for discussing these ideas from fresh standpoints, in order to play with the concepts of desire, past, and image.
This is probably a fruitful way, among many others, to overcome some current ready made ideas about the “archaeological process”.
In order not to keep tied to domestic visions of the past, too simplistic to comfort our imagination, and incapable of freeing us from the fetishism of the so-called “material record”.
Please see web page: http://www.tagconference.org/content/desires-past-what-do-archaeological-images-want
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Vítor Oliveira Jorge
Prof. Univ. Porto; investigador do CEAUCP
http://www.architectures.home.sapo.pt
http://configuracoes.planetaclix.pt
http://ia.regiaocentro.net/paginas/index.php?nIDPagina=14
blog: http://trans-ferir.blogspot.com/
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