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[ecrea] CFP Special Issue of Cultural Studies on 'Everyday Credit/Debt'

Thu Sep 26 13:33:20 GMT 2013



CULTURAL STUDIES
Special Issue: Everyday Debt and Credit
Co-edited by Gregory J. Seigworth (Millersville University) and Joe Deville
(Goldsmiths, University of London)

Call for Papers

How do ordinary matters of credit and debt circulate through the space-times
of the everyday and the intimate? How has their manner of circulation and
the nature of their saturation into the lives of borrowers changed in the
age of the app, of the mobile interface, of social media? What are the new
technologically enabled effects of debt and credit? Where and how is
everyday indebtedness felt by its users and inflected in and through the
architectures and atmospheres surrounding them? And, further, what are these
postures and practices of our emerging economy of debt and credit pointing
toward? From the advent of digitally mediated peer to peer lending to credit
scores consulted on first dates (calculating risk before date #2), from
cloud-connected loyalty cards to mobile payment and wallet technologies,
from the multi-pronged and carefully designed affective tactics of debt
collectors to the strategies of gamification for savings and personal
finance and more ­ the material and immaterial articulations of debt and
credit have woven themselves ever more ubiquitously into the ecologies of
the everyday. If the sheer pervasiveness of credit and debt has become a
defining feature of our era, we argue that their omnipresence cannot be
confronted as merely one more topic for consciousness-raising and ideology
critique. From the data-defined subjectivities of instantaneous algorithmic
calculations to those age-old debates over the moralities and immoralities
of debt to the emergence of redrawn bodily capacities (extended? shrunken?)
and institutional/networked accesses (granted? denied?) that arise with
evermore technologically-mediated credit/debt relationships, our
contributors will reveal how matters of credit and debt must be met in their
myriad relational entanglements with both the fine-grained and roughhewn
practices of daily life.

Thus, we welcome essays that provide an empirics of indebtedness as it
traverses this varied social and material terrain of the everyday. This
includes a contextual focus on the specific apparatuses, devices,
encounters, dispositions and affects of routine indebtedness and how
different forms of credit reach into and attach themselves to domains often
coded, as private, domestic, mundane, and non-economic. In attending to the
particularities of daily intersections with credit and/or debt contributions
might also consider how these mundane mediations of the economic connect to
and shape apparent contextual commonalities, how the politics of ubiquitous
credit is distributed, and where and in what form resistances, hacks and new
debtor publics might be found. The issue aims to be disciplinarily diverse,
to potentially include sociologists, anthropologists, philosophers,
political economists, cultural theorists, critical analysts of finance, and
those working in science and technology studies, while also inviting
contributions from designers, architects, managers and activists. We welcome
diverse and innovative takes on everyday indebtedness, ranging from (but not
limited to) auto-ethnographic accounts to those investigating through a mix
of sensory and/or digital approaches to credit&  debt practices.

Please contact the editors with a proposal of 500 words presenting an
orientation/overview of your angle of approach to this topic by February 15,
2014. Finished articles are also welcome at anytime but of course slight
revisions to better address our issue¹s themes should be expected.

Final full paper submissions are due no later than July 15, 2014. Articles
are generally between 5000-8000 words (double spaced, size 12 font),
including abstract and references. An abstract of 300 words (including 6
keywords) must be included for purposes of journal review. Please supply an
email address and other relevant contact information with your submission.
Multi-author works should clearly designate a corresponding author.
Manuscripts must conform to the Harvard reference style. Consult the
journal¹s Taylor and Francis website for further specifics on formatting and
author guidelines.

Send any inquiries, comments, proposals and papers to both co-editors on or
before the July 15, 2014 deadline: Gregory Seigworth
<(Gregory.Seigworth /at/ millersville.edu)>  and Joe Deville<(j.deville /at/ gold.ac.uk)>

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