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[Commlist] CFP: Media Cultures of the (Inter/Anti) Imperial Pacific
Tue Apr 02 15:40:12 GMT 2019
The Media Fields Editorial Collective at the UC Santa Barbara Department
of Film & Media Studies is currently accepting submissions for /Media
Fields/ Issue 15, "Media Cultures of the (Inter/Anti)Imperial Pacific,"
co-edited by Xiuhe Zhang and Tyler Morgenstern. Submissions are now due
April 30, 2019. Full CFP and submission details are below, and can also
be found online at http://mediafieldsjournal.org/call-for-submissions/.
Please circulate to any students, colleagues or lists you see fit. Your
help in distributing this CFP is sincerely appreciated!
Recent controversies—from protracted battles over international tariff
structures to renewed nuclear sabre rattling between the United States
and North Korea, and from the brutalities of offshore migrant detention
in places like Nauru to the construction of artificial islands in the
South China Sea—have thrust the Pacific theater to the forefront of
global geopolitical attention. But while these disputes often appear in
the guise of crisis, as urgent, largely unanticipated outbreaks of
acrimony, they are in many ways historically implicated. As Kornel Chang
writes, the Pacific has long been a deeply vexed geopolitical and
cultural domain, a vast theater of “interimperial” encounter striated by
the violences of colonial settlement, neocolonial retrenchment,
capitalist exploitation, racial domination, and military conquest. But
if these are political and cultural histories, they are at the same time
media histories. Indeed, since at least the mid-19th century, media and
communication technologies have played a central role both in the
consolidation of imperial ambitions across the Pacific, as well as in
the manifold ways these ambitions have been sabotaged, undermined, and
refused. Seeking to thematize these complex and ongoing histories, issue
15 of Media Fields Journal will explore the media cultures of the
(inter/anti) imperial Pacific.
In recent years, scholars of media and technology have turned often
toward the Pacific, showing how the region’s overlapping histories of
colonization and imperial expansion have fundamentally shaped global
communication infrastructures, and vice versa. Nicole Starosielski, for
instance, has shown the remarkable degree to which contemporary undersea
cable networks, particularly those that connect the west coast of North
America with the Asia Pacific, retrace nineteenth- and twentieth-century
colonial trading routes, transposing the lineaments of territorial
empire into a fiber optic register. Ruth Oldenziel, similarly, has read
the Pacific as a techno-imperial palimpsest, uncovering the surprising
geographic and logistical continuities between colonial coaling
stations, early electric telegraph networks, and the shortwave
communications infrastructures that proliferated across the Pacific in
the Cold War years. Dwayne Winseck and Robert Pike, finally, have
reconstructed in painstaking detail the emergence of coherent
communications markets in and around the Asia Pacific after about 1860—a
project that played out through a baffling choreography of interimperial
negotiation and corporate shell gaming.
In the hopes of extending these important contributions in new
directions, we seek original scholarship that explores how media have
functioned as tools of imperial governance in the Pacific since the 19th
Century, as well as their involvement in struggles for otherwise Pacific
worlds and decolonial futures. To this end, we invite contributions that
bring media history, theory and analysis into sustained conversation
with such fields as Native American and Indigenous studies, postcolonial
theory, critical race and ethnic studies, island and ocean studies, and
archipelagic American studies (see Roberts & Stephens, 2017). However,
we encourage submissions from all those whose work explores the richness
and vitality of Pacific media cultures—whether historical, contemporary,
or emergent—through the lenses of imperiality, coloniality, and/or
decolonization. Moreover, even as we acknowledge the abiding hegemony of
the United States across much of the Pacific theater, we strongly
encourage submissions that provincialize US- and Anglo-centric
perspectives, and approach the question of Pacific imperiality from
alternative national and/or geopolitical contexts.
Potential topics for papers include but are not limited to:
● Indigenous media theory, history, and critique
● Comparative and differential Indigeneities
● The technopolitics of imperial administration
● Activist media: anti-imperialism, decolonization, Indigenous
sovereignty
● The aesthetic and representational politics of (de)colonization
● Piracy, hacking, and sabotage
● Trauma, memory, and the archive
● Oceanic media infrastructures
● Colonial and imperial nostalgia
● South-South/East-East solidarities
● Critical political economy: tariffs, trade, intellectual
property, informality
● Gender, sexuality, and desire
● Past futures: Bandung, the Non-Aligned Movement, Nuclear
Non-Proliferation
● Environmental disruption and resource extraction (seafloor
dredging, artificial island construction, mining, dumping, pollution,
sea level rise)
● Media policy and regulation in/of colonial states
● Media, technology, and discourses of development
● (Mili)tourism
● Techno-orientalism
● (Revisiting) the cultural imperialism thesis
● Analytics of migration and settlement: the settler, the ‘coolie,’
the arrivant, the ‘free laborer,’ the indentured, etc.
● Asian settler colonialism (see Okamura & Fujikane, 2008;
Saranillio, 2013)
● Empire and/as media distribution
● Media and scalarity: locality, regionality, nationality,
globality, and the hemispheric
For any inquiries, please contact issue co-editors Tyler Morgenstern
((tylermorgenstern /at/ ucsb.edu) <mailto:(tylermorgenstern /at/ ucsb.edu)>) and Xiuhe
Zhang ((xiuhezhang /at/ ucsb.edu) <mailto:(xiuhezhang /at/ ucsb.edu)>). Submissions
should be approximately 1500–2500 words, and should include at least one
image or audio or video clip related to the essay topic. Email
submissions to (submissions /at/ mediafieldsjournal.org)
<mailto:(submissions /at/ mediafieldsjournal.org)>. For more information and
complete submission guidelines, please visit
http://www.mediafieldsjournal.org <http://www.mediafieldsjournal.org/>
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