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[ecrea] CFP: Media Fields Journal #14: At the Edge
Sun Sep 23 13:04:43 GMT 2018
*DEADLINE EXTENDED: November 9, 2018*
/Media Fields Journal /is excited to announce the call for papers for
Issue #14: /At the Edge/. We hope you will distribute this call to
graduate students affiliated with your department. Please see text below
or attached PDF.
Please email submissions to (submissions /at/ mediafieldsjournal.org)
<mailto:(submissions /at/ mediafieldsjournal.org)> by the *newly extended
deadline,* *November 9, 2018.*
For more information and submission guidelines, visit
http://www.mediafieldsjournal.org <http://www.mediafieldsjournal.org/>
*Call for Submissions: At the Edge*
*Media Fields Journal*
*University of California, Santa Barbara*
While researching the Hells Angels in the 1960s, Hunter S. Thompson
wrote “The edge…there is no honest way to explain it because the only
people who know where it is are the ones who have gone over.” Conceiving
of the edge as both a site of orientation and a sharp drop-off, Thompson
gestures towards its dual denotations: as “the line where an object
begins or ends” and “the cutting side of a blade.” Thus, the edge can
act both as a form of speculative orientation that provides boundaries
or points of entry, and as a threshold that offers the possibility of
“going over.”
As contemporary media scholarship continues to think through the
proliferation of internet and screen cultures, their edges remain
crucial to a comprehensive understanding. Scholars such as Adrian
Mackenzie, Lisa Parks, and Mel Hogan have explored media technologies at
or beyond their edges, asking how edge environments or experiences might
alter their ‘typical’ use. Edward S. Casey writes that edges supply “a
species of /boundaries/, that is, porous edges that take in as well as
give out—in contrast to /borders/, which act to delimit institutions and
concrete practices in the life-world.” Casey’s provocation suggests that
studying media at the fringes or peripheries of society necessitates a
discussion of the edges that construct their marginality. Additionally,
edges establish relationalities between entities through their capacity
to connect the nodes of distributed networks and complex systems. In
this way, exploring media technologies and practices ‘at the edge’ can
help locate imagined horizons and connections that inform the boundaries
of identity, community, and globality.
Explicit academic engagement with the edge has thus far been situated in
sociology, wherein ‘edgework’ came to be known as the study of
risk-taking within recreational contexts. Stephen Lyng describes in the
introduction to /Edgework /how leisure practices centered around risk
are paradoxically treated as a form of individuality and resistance to a
neoliberal society that itself demands economic and social precarity
more and more often. Despite this paradox (or perhaps because of it),
both individual and systemic risk—living on the edge—can be viewed as a
means of exploring broad cultural spaces and their boundaries, such as
those between safety and precarity, inclusion and exclusion, and life
and death.
The edge as a heuristic thus brings together scholarly work on
mediatized practices and spaces by examining exactly how their
boundaries actively (re)imagine and (de)construct the dimensions of
their existence. In consideration of the utility of the edge to rethink
conceptualizations of spaces and boundaries, this issue of /Media Fields
Journal /explores what happens ‘at the edge.’ We invite consideration of
sites, works, practices, and systems via the constitution of the edge
and its role as a permeable, although perhaps invisible, entity. We
welcome work that attempts to locate edges, and/or engages with the
(potentially traumatic) experience of having ‘gone over.’ We further
welcome attention to the sociological methodology of ‘edgework’ and how
it might productively extend to media studies, perhaps involving
industry norms of precarity and the never-ending quest for production on
‘the cutting edge.’
Dimensions of media ‘at the edge’ might include (but are not limited to):
* *Cinematic/Televisual Concerns:*Elimination of the visual/sonic edge
via wider screens, surround sound, 3-D enhancement, etc.;
consumption of the image in edge spaces; representations of ‘going
over the edge.’
* *Computational Concerns:*Edges and nodes; edges as active and
mediating sites; the edges of interfaces or platforms such as the
Samsung Galaxy Edge or Microsoft Edge; imagined digital spaces and
boundaries.
* *Environmental Concerns:*Edges of communities, societies, and/or
shared identities; mediating territorial edges; ecological impacts
of edgeless or wireless media; media in edge environments such as
data centers, server farms, media waste, etc.; edges of
technological reach and possibility.
* *Experiential Concerns:*Immersive media: virtual reality, augmented
reality, and the quest for ‘edgelessness;’ risk-taking individuals
and practices as a cultural tradition or rebellion; technologies
that mediate risk experiences; sexual practices of ‘edging.’
* *Industrial Concerns: *Precarity of media labor and innovation
practices; economic motivations to produce on ‘the cutting edge;’
speculative horizons of media.
For any inquiries, please contact issue co-editors Jeremy Moore
((jmoore /at/ umail.ucsb.edu) <mailto:(jmoore /at/ umail.ucsb.edu)>) and Nicole
Strobel ((nstrobel /at/ umail.ucsb.edu) <mailto:(nstrobel /at/ umail.ucsb.edu)>).
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