Thinking About ‘Things’ (TAT):
Interdisciplinary Futures in Material Culture
An Interdisciplinary, International Material Culture Conference for Graduate Students
May 10-12, 2010
University of Michigan
Call for papers—please circulate widely
Thinking about ‘Things’: Interdisciplinary Futures in Material Culture
TAT 2010 is a three-day international and interdisciplinary graduate student conference designed to explore material culture and the ways in which we create it, interact with it, use it, discard it, and study it.
Papers dealing with notions of preservation, broadly interpreted, are sought from graduate students working across a diverse spectrum of disciplines and interdisciplines.
Accepted papers will be arranged in panels according to the following rubric of theme areas:
1. Preservation in nature—preservation and decay with little or no human intervention (e.g. relics, ruins, remains)
2. Human practices of material culture preservation (e.g. food storage, taxidermy, archiving, museums, ‘green’ culture and resource conservation)
3. Preserving the intangible (e.g. memories, identity, social status) through the material.
4. Aesthetics, ethics, prescriptions, politics and theory of preservation, conservation, and restoration of material culture.
5. Meaningful objects and the museum—issues of preservation specific to the context of museums and museum-like institutions.
6. TATart—Nontraditional submissions are invited in audio, visual, textual, and virtual formats.
Deadline for submission of abstracts is January 15, 2010. For more information or to submit your 250-word abstract, visit www.tat2010.com.
We welcome submissions from students at all stages of graduate study.
2010 CFP: