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[ecrea] CFP: Speculative Finance / Speculative Fiction
Mon Sep 05 16:10:51 GMT 2016
CFP: Speculative Finance/Speculative Fiction (Edited Collection)
David M. Higgins and Hugh Charles O’Connell
The 2008 global economic crash awakened many to the inherent
precariousness of the global capitalist world-system, and it has
provoked renewed demands for financial regulation as well as
revolutionary speculations concerning the end of capitalism
itself.Phenomena such as the critical success of films like /The Big
Short/ and the unexpected resonance of Bernie Sanders’ presidential
primary campaign have drawn attention to (and fostered discontent
around) the dangers of speculative finance, yet for many, speculative
finance is a problem akin to global warming: It seems to occur beyond
the size and scale of everyday experience, and it seems nearly
unapproachable in terms of critical praxis. Thus, at a nearly universal
level, the distance between everyday life and the systemic structures of
late capitalism now seem incommensurable and irreal. In the face of such
irreality, speculative genres offer unique and extraordinary critical
perspectives concerning our contemporary financialized existence.
This edited collection seeks essays that examine a broad range of
imaginative productions that bridge the relationships between finance
speculation and speculative fiction.The volume’s organizing principle is
that speculative fiction, as a particularly modern form, has often (if
not always) been attuned to the speculative and fantastical nature of
capitalist economics.
Contributions may thus include articles that examine utopias and
dystopias, literary speculative fiction, science fiction, fantasy, New
Weird fiction, and other non-mimetic literary imaginings. We also
welcome contributions that move beyond the literary, including all forms
of digital and graphic media, film, and performance. Likewise, we
encourage contributions that focus on work from any and all global,
national, extranational, or regional positions.
In terms of the analysis of speculative finance, we recognize that
neither finance nor speculation are originary conditions of the
twenty-first century, even as they have combined to form a dominant
center in the global 21st century economy. Therefore, we seek a broad
historical approach that limns the origins, development, and rise to
global hegemony of speculative finance, and we welcome contributions
that examine the beginnings of speculative finance in early speculative
fiction and within imperial systems of extraction, finance, and market
formation/consolidation. We also encourage investigations of the
contemporary relationships between speculative fiction and speculative
finance, and, given the universal ramifications of financialization, we
welcome essays from a diverse set of critical positions.
Questions to consider may include (but are not limited to) the following:
·What can science fictional economies tell us about fictive capital (and
vice versa)?
·How does literary speculation illuminate, fortify, and/or challenge the
models of futurity embodied within finance capital and its associated
speculative instruments and practices?
·Is the (lack of) futurity in dystopian sf relatable to the ontology of
debt?
·How can the tools of sf studies such as cognitive estrangement or the
novum help us to understand the invention of financial instruments —
e.g. the credit default swap — and the new financial worlds they built
around them?
·What might the operations of speculative finance reveal about the
futures, the otherworlds, and the alternate histories produced by our
speculative narrative forms?
·Is bitcoin a science fictional currency?
·Are the disjunctive temporalities of (New) Weird fiction mappable to
the waves of commodity production and financialization?
·Is the “speculative” of speculative fiction the same as that of
speculative finance?
·How does the imbrication of the futures industry, futures trading, and
sf/f futurism relate to speculative finance and the universalization of
indebted life?
·What can utopianism as an economic subset of sf tell us about the
development of speculative finance?
·Do feminist utopias as alternate social configurations provide
critiques of the phallocentric drives of finance capitalism?
·How is sf franchising related to the logics of financialization,
commodification, and debt?
·How might the application of feminist epistemology to technoscientific
sf help to reveal sf’s complicity with the ideology of financialization?
·How might the disjunctive temporalities of time travel, multiple worlds
and/or alternate history critique the disjunctive aspects of finance
capital and its predation on the future?
·What can sf/f world-building reveal about the operation of global
capitalist world-systems theory (and vice versa)?
·What does the ludic aspect of speculative narrative – including the
prominence of gaming and simulation – tell us about the universalization
of individualized risk and/or futures trading as key aspects of the
global shadow economy?
·How does the imbrication of fictive economies with real economies in
contemporary video games relate to the conditions of speculative finance?
Prospective contributors should submit a 300-500 word abstract, contact
information, and a brief bio or CV to both David M. Higgins
((dmhiggin /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(dmhiggin /at/ gmail.com)>) and Hugh Charles
O’Connell ((Hugh.OConnell /at/ umb.edu) <mailto:(Hugh.OConnell /at/ umb.edu)>).
Abstracts are due November 1, 2016.Completed essays will be due in May
2017 with the goal of a late 2017 or early 2018 publication date.
Sincerely,
David M. Higgins, Inver Hills College ((dmhiggin /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(dmhiggin /at/ gmail.com)>)
Hugh Charles O’Connell, University of Massachusetts Boston
((Hugh.OConnell /at/ umb.edu) <mailto:(Hugh.OConnell /at/ umb.edu)>)
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