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[ecrea] CULTURAL POLITICS Volume 7, Issue 2, JULY 2011
Thu Jun 02 20:14:12 GMT 2011
Dear friends and colleagues
I am pleased to announce the publication of CULTURAL POLITICS Volume 7,
Issue 2, JULY 2011, which is a General Issue.
Official website here:
http://www.bergpublishers.com/BergJournals/CulturalPolitics/tabid/520/Default.aspx
Cultural Politics’ Artists’ website here:
http://newsgrist.typepad.com/culturalpolitics/
Subscribe here:
http://www.bergpublishers.com/JournalsHomepage/CustomerServices/SubscribeRenew/tabid/3420/Default.aspx
Please feel free to circulate this message to any relevant email lists etc.
PLEASE NOTE: CULTURAL POLITICS IS MOVING TO DUKE UNIVERSITY PRESS FROM
VOLUME 8, ISSUE 1, 2012
Best wishes.
John.
Dr John Armitage
Associate Dean &
Head of Department of Media
Co-editor, Cultural Politics
School of Arts & Social Sciences
Room SQ318d, Squires Building
Northumbria University
Newcastle upon Tyne
NE1 8ST
(e) (w): (j.armitage /at/ unn.ac.uk)
(e) (h): (j.armitage /at/ technologica.demon.co.uk)
(t) Blackberry: +44 (0)7966977782
(t) Office: +44 (0)191 227 4971
Visit the Cultural Politics website at:
http://www.bergpublishers.com/BergJournals/CulturalPolitics/tabid/520/Default.aspx
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Cultural Politics
Volume 7, Issue 2
GENERAL ISSUE
July 2011
Articles
The Hurt Locker: Cinematic Addiction, ‘Critique’, and The War on Terror
Bruce Bennett and Bulent Diken interrogate The Hurt Locker, an
enthusiastically-received ‘critical’ film, as a symptom of today’s
prevailing cultural and political codes. Dwelling on the homologies
between the state of exception and the narrative logic of the film,
including its reflection on the banalization of exception, Bennett and
Diken emphasize that, ddespite its critical credentials, The Hurt Locker
is totally silent on the most crucial aspect of the war against terror,
its de-politicizing effects.
Che and the Pre-Eminence of Culture in Revolutionary Cuba: The Pursuit
of a Spontaneous, Inseparable Integrity
Clive W. Kronenberg on the triumphs and continuity of the Cuban
revolution with regard to the close bond that exists between political
and cultural practice on the island. Emblematic of Cuban politics, key
aspects of Ernesto Che Guevara’s revolutionary thought find expression
in Cuban cultural theory and practices in the national, popular, and
expressive arts domains, which strikingly sustains the revolution’s
goals to bring about an equal and unified national community, a radical
anti-imperialist, internationalist political ethos, and a deeply-rooted
universal arts tradition.
A People of Seers: The Political Aesthetics of Postwar Cinema Revisited
Julian Reid probes the politics of Gilles Deleuze’s study of cinematic
modernity. Issuing a challenge to film studies’ traditional
understanding of the political in Deleuze’s studies, Reid argues that
understanding and fulfilling the political potential of his works
requires analyzing the importance of Deleuze’s account of the rupture
between classical and modern cinema for his political concept of ‘a
people’, an argument that moves beyond the impoverished state of the
debate on Deleuze and ‘political cinema’ by exploring how his works
trace the changing relation of cinema to the historical development of a
post-national politics of people-production, and especially his account
of what it names ‘a people of seers’.
Masquerade
Phyllis Galembo is an American photographer who has traveled extensively
in the Caribbean and Africa to witness and document rituals that involve
extraordinarily creative masking and costuming. Over the past 20 years,
she has traveled to the Republic of Benin, Sierra Leone, Nigeria,
Brazil, Cuba, Jamaica, and Haiti to photograph traditional priests and
priestesses, carnival masqueraders, dancers, and Haitian Vodou
practitioners, wearing elaborate costumes created for weddings and
burials, initiations, chiefs’ coronations, protests and holidays.
On the Political in the Wake: Carl Schmitt and James Joyce’s Political
Theologies
Kieran Keohane explores the work of Carl Schmitt and James Joyce and,
particular, their response to the crisis of European civilization of the
inter-war years. Bringing Schmitt and Joyce into conversation with one
another through the mediation of Nietzsche’s The Birth of Tragedy,
Schmitt as representative and advocate of Apollonian logocentrism and
Joyce of Dionysian muthos, Keohane investigates the parallels as well as
differences in these authors’ works while illuminating the figure of the
dictator and the theme of political theology, to reveal the deep
affinity between Schmitt and totalitarianism on the one hand and Joyce
and radical and plural democracy on the other.
The Politics of Transcendence
Harald Wydra on modern politics and its dogmatic separation of politics
from religion, of the state from promises of salvation. Making a case
for the fundamentally political nature of transcendence, Wydra argues
that the changing relationships between authority and salvation depend
on culturally crafted engagements of the spiritual and the temporal.
Examining configurations of the political in the history of the west,
which can be grasped as extraordinary form of “absolute” politics, he
shows how ultimate ends influenced the emergence of secular forms of
power and how the politics of transcendence must go beyond the
friend-enemy distinction by incorporating the potentiality of forms of
non-violent political action, where the ends are superior to the means.
Traveling Spies and Liminal Texts: Cold War Culture in Asian Spy Films
Leong Yew examines little known Asian spy films and their relationship
with Cold War cultural studies. While their Anglo-American counterparts
could be discursively analyzed for the way they portrayed Western
anxieties about communism, constructed own identities as opposed to the
alterity of Russians and communists, these films defy easy
categorization because they not only reproduced these cinematic tropes
but also weaved in politics, themes, and conventions outside the
mainstream Cold War narrative. Exploring four spy/cop action films made
by Filipino director, Bobby Suarez, and surveying how a global cinematic
circularity shapes the creative and industrial aspects of Asian spy
films, Yew considers how the importation of cinematic styles like
blaxploitation and the Hong Kong kung fu genre reconfigured Asian
culturalist positions and redrew conflict positions from that of
capitalism versus communism to that of Asians versus Westerners.
Book Review Essay
The Limits of Control
Seb Franklin on Raiford Guins’ Edited Clean Version: Technology and the
Culture of Control and Jussi Parikka and Tony D. Sampson (Eds.)’ The
Spam Book: on Viruses, Porn and Other Anomalies from the Dark Side of
Digital Culture. Beginning with Gilles Deleuze’s concept of the control
society, Franklin analyzes its substantial role in shaping scholarly
discourse on new media and politics over the past twenty years prior to
foregrounding the problems associated with this perspective and
presenting a variety of approaches to the difficulty of critique related
to new media.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
About Cultural Politics
“Cultural Politics is a welcome and innovative addition. In an academic
universe already well populated with journals, it is carving out its own
unique place—broad and a bit quirky. It likes to leap between the
theoretical and the concrete, so that it is never boring and often
filled with illuminating glimpses into the intellectual and cultural
worlds.” Lawrence Grossberg, University of North Carolina, USA.
Edited by
John Armitage, Northumbria University, UK
Ryan Bishop, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Douglas Kellner, University of California, Los Angeles, USA
Cultural Politics is an international, refereed journal that explores
the global character and effects of contemporary culture and politics.
It analyzes how cultural identities, agencies and actors, political
issues and conflicts, and global media are linked, characterized,
examined and resolved. In doing so, the journal explores precisely what
is cultural about politics and what is political about culture. It
investigates the marginalized and outer regions of this complex and
interdisciplinary subject area.
Each issue publishes artwork by selected artists reflecting contemporary
cultural and political issues.
Official website here:
http://www.bergpublishers.com/BergJournals/CulturalPolitics/tabid/520/Default.aspx
Cultural Politics’ Artists’ website here:
http://newsgrist.typepad.com/culturalpolitics/
Subscribe here:
http://www.bergpublishers.com/JournalsHomepage/CustomerServices/SubscribeRenew/tabid/3420/Default.aspx
WANT TO SUBMIT AN ARTICLE OR BOOK REVIEW?
1) Manuscript Submissions
Should you have an article you would like to submit, please write to the
editors:
Dr John Armitage
Associate Dean &
Head of Department of Media
Co-editor, Cultural Politics
School of Arts & Social Sciences
Room SQ318d, Squires Building
Northumbria University
Newcastle upon Tyne
NE1 8ST
(e) (w): (j.armitage /at/ unn.ac.uk)
e) (h): (j.armitage /at/ technologica.demon.co.uk)
(t) Blackberry: +44 (0)7966977782
(t) Office: +44 (0)191 227 4971
Visit the Cultural Politics website at:
http://www.bergpublishers.com/BergJournals/CulturalPolitics/tabid/520/Default.aspx
And
Dr Ryan Bishop
Co-Editor, Cultural Politics
Associate Professor of English
The National University of Singapore
Department of English
AS5, Arts Link
Singapore 117570
Tel. + 65-6874 6633
Fax: + 65-6773 2981
Email: (ellrb /at/ nus.edu.sg)
2) Book Reviews
Please contact Mark Featherstone for consideration for review in
Cultural Politics.
Dr Mark Featherstone
Book Reviews Editor
Cultural Politics
Sociology
CESSW, Keele University
Keele ST5 5BG
Staffordshire
UK
Email: (spa.37 /at/ keele.ac.uk)
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