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[ecrea] cfp: PARADOXA's "Africa SF" special issue
Mon Jul 16 22:04:22 GMT 2012
PARADOXA is seeking submissions of previously unpublished essays on
subjects related to
AFRICAN SCIENCE FICTION.
In 2010, PUMZI, the first Kenyan sf movie, won the best short film award
at the Cannes Independent Film Festival, and the South African
co-production DISTRICT 9 was nominated for multiple Oscars. In 2011,
Nigerian-American Nnedi Okorafor became the first author of African
extraction to win the World Fantasy Award, with WHO FEARS DEATH, and
South African Lauren Beukes became the first person from Africa to win
the Arthur C. Clarke Award, with ZOO CITY.
Recent journal issues (AFRICAN IDENTITIES 7.2, SCIENCE FICTION STUDIES
102, SOCIAL TEXT 20.2), edited collections (Barr's AFRO-FUTURE FEMALES)
and monographs (Lavender's RACE IN AMERICAN SCIENCE FICTION, Nama's
BLACK SPACE and SUPER BLACK) have been devoted to afrofuturism,
African-American sf and African Americans in sf. In addition, there have
been numerous publications on the relationships among sf, imperialism,
colonialism, postcolonialism, globalization and Empire (cf. SCIENCE
FICTION STUDIES 118, Hoagland/Sarwal's SCIENCE FICTION, IMPERIALISM AND
THE THIRD WORLD, Kerslake's SCIENCE FICTION AND EMPIRE, Langer's
POSTCOLONIALISM AND SCIENCE FICTION, Raja/Ellis/Nandi's THE POSTNATIONAL
FANTASY, Rieder's COLONIALISM AND THE EMERGENCE OF SCIENCE FICTION).
Yet sf from Africa, and the Africa(s) in sf, remain relatively
unexplored. In order to address this lacuna, the "Africa SF" issue of
PARADOXA is interested in essays that address:
1. Critical work on sf by Africans, including such films as SANKOFA
(Gerima 1993), LES SAIGNANTES (Bekolo 2005), AFRICA PARADIS (Amoussou
2006), DISTRICT 9 (Blomkamp 2009), PUMZI (Kahiu 2009), and KAJOLA
(Akinmolayan 2010), and such novels as Mohammed Dib's WHO REMEMBERS THE
SEA (1962), Sony Labou Tansi's LIFE AND A HALF (1977), Kojo Laing's
WOMAN OF THE AEROPLANES (1988), MAJOR GENTL AND THE ACHIMOTA WARS (1992)
and BIG BISHOP ROKO AND THE ALTAR GANGSTERS (2006), Ngu~gi~ wa
Thiong'o's WIZARD OF THE CROW (2006), Lauren Beukes' MOXYLAND (2008) and
ZOO CITY (2010), and Ahmed Khaled Towfik's UTOPIA (2008), and s. Can
such novels as Ousmane Sembene's THE LAST OF THE EMPIRE (1981) and
Adaobi Tricia Nwaubani's I DO NOT COME TO YOU BY CHANCE (2009) be
productively read as sf? Is there African sf produced in other media?
2. Critical work on Afrodiasporic authors, filmmakers, musicians and
artists, especially as they address Africa, imperialism, colonialism,
postcolonialism, globalization, Empire, and/or diaspora, such as Steven
Barnes, Octavia Butler, Copperwire, Samuel R. Delany, Tananarive Due,
Minister Faust, Andrea Hairston, Pauline Hopkins, Nalo Hopkinson, T.
Shirby Hodge, Anthony Joseph, LaBelle, Nnedi Okorafor, Outkast,
Parliament-Funkadelic, Charles Saunders, George S Schuyler, Nishi Shawl,
Sun Ra, and John A. Williams.
3. Critical work on the representation of Africa in sf by non-African
authors, such as JG Ballard, VF Calverton, George Alec Effinger, Jon
Courtenay Grimwood, Theodor Hertzka, Julian Huxley, AM Lightner, Ian
MacDonald, Mike Resnick, Mack Reynolds, Jules Verne, as well as in
comics (e.g., Marvel's Black Panther, the British-authored Nigerian
Powerman) and other media.
Prospective contributors may contact the guest editor with questions
about a particular topic's appropriateness. Double-spaced submissions
should be between 6,000 and 10,000 words in length, not including "Works
Cited," and prepared in accordance with MLA style. Please forward
manuscripts as MS Word attachments. Within the email itself include
name, affiliation, 250-word abstract, and any other relevant
information. Submissions should be directed to Paradoxa's guest editor,
Mark Bould at (mark.bould /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(mark.bould /at/ gmail.com)> by
March 1, 2013. For more information about PARADOXA see www.paradoxa.com
<http://www.paradoxa.com>.
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