MAPPING IN ARTS AND HUMANITIES RESEARCH
TWO WORKSHOPS
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 14TH, 2017, 10AM-3PM
KING'S COLLEGE LONDON
STRAND CAMPUS
STRAND, LONDON WC2R 2LS
ROOM K4U.12 KINGS BLDG
AND
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 21ST, 2017, 10AM-3PM
UNIVERSITY COLLEGE LONDON
GOWER STREET, LONDON WC1E 6BT
ROOM TO BE CONFIRMED
Co-hosted by King’s College London and University College London
Generously funded by the London Arts and Humanities Partnership (LAHP)
Theories and practices of mapping have been increasingly prominent and
influential in arts and humanities research in the past twenty years.
The histories of art, architecture, film, literature, and other
cultural forms have been retold from geographical, spatial
perspectives, across disciplinary lines, by Giuliana Bruno, Denis
Cosgrove, Tom Conley, Thomas Da Costa Kauffmann, Rob Kitchin, Franco
Moretti, Ricardo Padron, and Todd Presner, to name just a few. Drawing
on rich influences in geography, sociology, architecture and urban
planning, these scholars and others have used maps to rethink art,
culture, and the humanities, or vice versa. As such, mapping has
become one of the key tools by which arts and humanities researchers
have collaborated and innovated, and by which they have interacted
with the social sciences.
Many arts and humanities PhD students today seek to incorporate maps
and mapping in their research, and yet provision of doctoral training
specifically in this cross-disciplinary area is rare. This is despite
the fact that digital technologies have made mapping increasingly
feasible and sophisticated, in technical terms, even for those without
specialist cartographic training. Mapping has also become increasingly
informative and rewarding methodologically – e.g. what Todd Presner
calls “thick mapping” - as a complement to, or, for some, even a
replacement for, certain, more traditional aspects of research.
On June 14th and June 21st, 2017, King’s College London and
University College London will co-host two half-day workshops with the
aim of examining the use of maps in arts and humanities research. The
symposium will be open to all; the workshops will be aimed primarily
at current PhD students, with a limited number of places for
postdoctoral researchers and others.
Because there is a limited number of places and high demand for these
workshops, in order to register for them you must register for both
workshops and be willing and able to attend both - i.e. June 14th and
June 21st. Thanks for your understanding.
There will also a third event, a one-day Symposium, on the same topic,
so that the three events will make up a series. The workshops are
geared towards PhD students, but the Symposium will be open to all.
There is a separate registration process for the Symposium, described
below.
THE WORKSHOPS
The two research methods workshops on mapping will be hosted by Dr
Mark Shiel at King’s on June 14th and by Dr Roland-François Lack at
UCL on June 21st. In these, Shiel and Lack will present their own
research with maps, but interactively, alongside students and other
researchers who will make brief presentations on their work with maps
or discuss maps (digital or analogue) they have found useful in their
research. The workshops will be practical, interactive and
computer-based, relying on demonstrations and small group work, with
each event open to a maximum of 40 people. Hence, the workshops will
provide an opportunity to present, examine, and discuss a wide variety
of maps in detail, benefiting from the sharing of case studies and
interpretations.
Eligibility for the WORKSHOPS: These events will be aimed primarily at
current PhD students in any arts and HUMANITIES OR SOCIAL SCIENCE
DISCIPLINE, from across the UK. A proportion of places will be
ring-fenced for students from institutions associated with the LAHP
(KCL, UCL, School of Advanced Study, LONDON School of Economics, Queen
Mary University of LONDON), but all others are also warmly encouraged
to attend. To attend the WORKSHOPS, it is necessary to register in
advance. It is also necessary to sign up to attend both WORKSHOPS
(rather than one or the other). No special expertise in MAPPING
TECHNIQUES OR MAP ANALYSIS WILL BE REQUIRED; PhD students at any stage
of their studies may reserve a place, whether they have a lot of
experience with maps or very little.
THE SYMPOSIUM
The third event will be a one-day symposium on theories and methods of
“Mapping in Arts and Humanities Research”, to be held at King’s
on June 27th.
Providing an opportunity to reflect on the strengths, limitations, and
methodological challenges and problems posed by maps and mapping in
arts and humanities research, this symposium will feature eight short
papers, a keynote address, and a roundtable. It will be open to a
wider audience than the workshops, i.e. the whole academic community
and others working in relevant professional fields.
We have great pleasure in announcing that the keynote speaker will be
Professor SHANNON MATTERN of the New School for Social RESEARCH, in
New York. Mattern is the author of _The New Downtown Library:
Designing with Communities_ (2017) and _Deep Mapping the Media City_
(2015), both published by University of Minnesota Press, as well as
numerous journal articles and book chapters.
( http://www.wordsinspace.net/shannon/
[http://www.wordsinspace.net/shannon/] )
To register for the symposium, there is a separate process. Please
register here:
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/mapping-in-arts-and-humanities-research-symposium-tickets-33364145056
[https://www.eventbrite.com/e/mapping-in-arts-and-humanities-research-symposium-tickets-33364145056]
ABOUT THE ORGANISERS
Mark Shiel is Reader in Film Studies and Urbanism in the Department
of Film Studies at King’s College LONDON. He has published widely on
the subject of cinema and cities, most recently his monograph
_Hollywood Cinema and the Real Los Angeles_ (Reaktion Books/University
of Chicago Press, 2012).
Roland-François Lack is a Senior Lecturer in the French Department
at UCL, where he teaches nineteenth-century literature and
twentieth-century film. He is the author of numerous works on
Lautréamont, Kristeva, Tel Quel, and the nouvelle vague, and he is
the author and curator of the celebrated website cinetourist.net
The organisers gratefully acknowledge the support of the London Arts
and Humanities Partnership, which is in turn funded by the Arts and
Humanities Research Council.
These events will also form part of the first year’s activities of
the new London Urban Media Research Network, a collaboration of KCL,
UCL, the LSE, and Birkbeck College aimed at coordinating and
increasing research activity on the interaction of cities and media,
broadly defined.
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22/06/2017 Last update