[SIGCIS-Members] Call for ICOHTEC & TICCIH Joint Conference 2010, Reusing the Industrial Past

Petri Paju petpaju at utu.fi
Sat May 9 07:56:05 PDT 2009


Call for Poster, Papers and Sessions

ICOHTEC & TICCIH Joint Conference 2010

Reusing the Industrial Past

10–15 August 2010 Tampere, Finland

A Joint Conference between the International Committee for the History
of Technology (ICOHTEC) and The International Committee for the
Conservation of the Industrial Heritage (TICCIH). The International
Association of the Labour Museums (WORKLAB) is a minor partner in the
conference.

Deadline for Proposals is 16 November 2009.

Conference language: English

As a joint conference, the primary theme ‘Reusing the Industrial Past’
is intended to be a broad idea covering various approaches. Clearly, the
industrial past is reused whenever old industrial installations are
renovated or adapted. There have been many attempts to preserve the most
significant aspects of old industrial areas after productive activity
has ceased, by giving them a new viable function. However, the idea of
reusing the industrial past need not stop there.

Old industrial and handicraft technology can also be reintroduced and
reused in manufacturing various products or in explaining how they work
to the public in exhibitions. Various kinds of ‘retroproducts’ are now
in vogue, while people are looking for alternative technological
solutions for plastics, electronics, concrete, artificial chemicals and
fertilisers. Knowledge of old technologies is in demand. What
technologies do historians suggest could be reused?
Manufacturing still has a strong impact on culture, working habits and
ethics. The industrial past and obsolete technologies are also present
in the way people think and use their language. For instance, “put the
small pulley on” continues to be used as a metaphor in British English
for speeding up. Similar examples can be found in other languages as
well. For social historians, it would be interesting to discover
practices and ethics of factory work that continue to be used in offices
and shops today. The culture of work seems to change more slowly than
work itself and technology in use.

The conference programme will include scientific and plenary sessions,
poster presentations, business meetings and general assemblies of the
organising societies, excursions, social events such as receptions and
the banquet, and pre- and post-conference trips. The premises of the
University of Tampere and the historical industrial buildings on the in
the City Centrum will serve as conference venues.

Conference Subthemes

In order to make the conference theme as strong as possible, the
programme committees have decided that all papers must fit within one of
the following sub-themes (which must be indicated on the proposal). The
bullet points under the subthemes are simply examples of topics that fit
into the each subtheme. Papers need not deal specifically with a
particular bullet point:
1. Nuts and Bolts Keep on Rolling
• Deindustrialisation and restructuring: Threat or opportunity?
• Stubborn technologies: Resistance to change
• Technological outcasts: Products and solutions rejected by consumers
• Technological comeback: Retroproducts and retrodesign
• Reinventing the industrial past: Innovations that never existed
• Legitimising competitiveness: Political and economic actions to
support technological image and performance
• Processes in change: Technology of textile manufacturing and papermaking

2. Artefacts and Experiences in Transition: Challenges for Industrial
Heritage
• Canonisation of the symbols of industrial revolutions
• Living and dead industrial landscapes
• Regeneration through heritage
• Reuse of industrial environments
• Societal aims for the conservation of industrial heritage
• Adapting technology and reforming industrial heritage
• Contested pasts - the heritage of science, technology and industry in
geo-political conflict

3. Social History of Industry
• Reinterpretations of the First Industrial Revolution
• Social history of factory work
• Identities of blue-collar workers and white-collar workers in industry
• People and machines in industrial history
• Masculine machines and female labour: Gender in industry
• Local experiences: changes in work, vanishing employment, emerging
opportunities
• Twins astray? Labour history and industrial history
• Serfs of looms and slaves of mobile phones

4. Cultural History of Technology
• Emotions and machines: Adored and hated technologies
• Technological optimism and pessimism
• Company cultures: Breaks and continuity
• Ethics of factory work
• Workers’ culture: Legitimising hard work
• Long shadow of history: Influence of the industrial past in our
present way of life
• Fossilisation of factory rhetoric in language
• Exploiting images of the industrial past

5. Environmental History of Industrialisation and Deindustrialisation
• Harnessing nature: Environmental exploitation
• Interdependence of energy and mechanisation in the smoke-stack industries
• Smoke-stack industry as an environmental burden
• Environmental heritage of the First Industrial Revolution
• Environmental consequences of deindustrialisation


6. Museums and Industrial Memories
• Collection policies for the industrial era
• New perspectives for exhibiting industrial heritage
• Challenges for museums in the postindustrial society
• Museum architecture in old factories

Proposal Guidelines
We urge contributors to consider organizing a full session of three or
more papers. Individual paper submissions will, of course, be considered.

Note: Membership of ICOHTEC, TICCIH, or WORKLAB is not required to
participate in the conference.

INDIVIDUAL PAPER proposals must include: (1) a 250-word (maximum)
abstract in English; and (2) a one-page CV. Abstracts should include the
author’s name and email address, a short descriptive title, a concise
statement of the thesis, a brief discussion of the sources, and a
summary of the major conclusions. Please indicate one of the specified
subthemes for your paper.

In preparing your paper, remember that presentations are not full-length
articles. You will have no more than 15-20 minutes to speak – depending
on the number of speakers in your session – which is roughly equivalent
to 6-8 double-spaced typed pages. Contributors are encouraged to submit
full-length versions of their papers after the conference for
consideration by ICOHTEC’s journal ICON or TICCIH’s journal Industrial
Patrimony. For more suggestions about preparing your conference
presentation, please consult the guidelines at the conference web site:
http://www.tampere.fi/industrialpast2010.

SESSION proposals must include: (1) an abstract of the session (250
words maximum), listing the proposed papers and a session chairperson;
(2) abstracts for each paper (250 words maximum); (3) a one-page CV for
each contributor and chairperson. Sessions should consist of three or
four speakers and may include several sections of three to four speakers
each, which might extend over more than one day. We also encourage
"untraditional" session or roundtable proposals.

POSTER proposals must include (1) a 250-word (maximum) abstract in
English; and (2) a one-page CV. Abstracts should include the author’s
name and email address, a short descriptive title, a concise statement
of the thesis, a brief discussion of the sources, and a summary of the
major conclusions. Please indicate one of the specified subthemes for
your poster.

Proposal submissions

The final deadline for all submissions is Monday 16 November 2009.

Please submit proposals for papers and sessions via the website of the
Tampere conference at http://www.tampere.fi/industrialpast2010.

If web access is unavailable, proposals may be sent by fax to ICOHTEC
2010 at: +358 (0) 3 5656 6808. Otherwise they may be sent via regular
mail or courier, postmarked not later than 9 November 2009. The mail
address is:

ICOHTEC 2010
c/o Museum Centre Vapriikki
PL 487
Alaverstaanraitti 5
33101 Tampere
Finland

All questions about the programme proposals should be submitted to the
local organizing committee, icohtecticcih2010 at tampere.fi. Queries about
the conference venue should be made to the same address.

Further information on host organisations:

ICOHTEC: http://www.icohtec.org/
TICCIH: http://www.mnactec.cat/ticcih/
WORKLAB: http://www.worklab.dk/
University of Tampere: http://www.uta.fi/english/
Museum Centre Vapriikki: http://www.tampere.fi/english/vapriikki/index.html
The Finnish Labour Museum Werstas: http://www.tyovaenmuseo.fi/?q=en

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Transmitted by

Timo Myllyntaus
General Secretary of ICOHTEC






-- 
Petri Paju, FT, tutkija, Turun yliopisto
-- Ph.D. Researcher, Univ. of Turku
http://users.utu.fi/petpaju/



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