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[Commlist] CFP: Internet, Humor, and Nation in Latin/x America
Fri Dec 06 05:30:31 GMT 2019
CFP for a volume titled:*Internet, Humor, and Nation in Latin/x
America*, coedited by Héctor Fernández L’Hoeste and Juan Poblete.
The internet is both a medium, the latest in a long line of previous
mass media, and a space of trans-individuation and collective
co-creation. As a media channel and a format, it tends to privilege
certain forms, lengths, affects. As a commons, it is nurtured by all
participants and shapes their affects and subjectivities in ways that
have deep cultural, economic, political consequences inside and outside
the nation. As a relatively de-territorialized space, it interacts in
myriad ways with the forms of cultural and political territorialization
of the nation. Finally, as a communicational infrastructure, the
internet is tied in more classical ways to the geopolitics of
information production and circulation. Humor, on the other hand,is
often based on mechanisms of superiority, relief, or incongruity. As
theorized by Simon Critchley, for example,ethnic humor in a national
context is an instance of superiority-based humor. It functions like “a
secret code” that is shared by all those who belong to the /ethnos/ and
it produces a context and community-based /ethos/ of superiority. This
superiority is expressed in two ways: first, foreigners do not share
/our/ sense of humor or simply lack a sense of humor. Secondly,
foreigners are themselves funny and worth laughing at. Thus, humor plays
a key role in the signaling of boundaries of identity—who stands inside
or outside significant creative spaces. With the nature of the internet
and humor in mind, we are seeking contributions for a volume
provisionally titled /Internet, Humor, and Nation in Latin/x America/*.*
We ask: if what we described above is the case in a nation-based
context, how does the internet alter, confirm, heighten, or deflate the
dynamics of humor? If internet-based humor is a relief, what is it a
relief of or from? What are the syntactics and semantics specific to
internet humor? What is the specific logic of internet-based humor? In
the internet context, what is incongruous? When it comes to humor, what
relationships does the audiovisual aspect of the internet enter into
with its written side? What kinds of humor go viral and which don’t, and
why? What role does humor itself play in the affective and economic
structure of the internet?
We are seeking original articles for an edited collection on the role of
internet humor in the definition of cultural, economic, political, and
social national and transnational processes and critiques. Within this
context, recent precedents on the topic of humor in modern media are
Jody Baumgartner and Jonathan Morris’s /Laughing Matters: Humor and
American Politics in the Media Age /(Routledge, 2008), which examines
the role of humor in US politics—along with David Thorne’s /The Internet
is a Playground/ (Penguin, 2011), exemplifying a performative
disposition—and articles like Luis Loya García’s “Latino Humor in
Comparative Perspective.” In the spirit ofCualca (AR), País de Boludos
(AR), Greg News (BR), Porta dos Fundos (BR), Actualidad Panamericana
(CO), La Pulla (CO), Upsocl (CL), ElDeforma (MX), El Pulso de la
República (MX), Gente Como Uno (PE), or Remezcla (US), we hope to
contribute to the study of the interaction among humor, nation, and the
internet. While much work to date in this field has focused on
satire—see Paul Alonso’s /Satiric TV in the Americas/ (Oxford, 2018),
which discusses the impact of streaming—we are interested in all types
of internet-based humor practices (cutting across formats and media).
The volume aims at exploring, from a multi and interdisciplinary open
perspective, the diverse ways in which cyber-humor is created, produced,
consumed, used, circulated, reproduced, reacted to. On the whole, we are
interested in the significance of cyber-discourses and cyber-narratives
in the context of local, national, regional, transnational, and global
cultural production, commercial ventures, material culture, audiences,
education, government policy, and community practices.
Potential contributors should send a 500 to 1,000 word abstract, a short
bio & bibliography, and complete contact information to Héctor Fernández
L’Hoeste ((fernandez /at/ gsu.edu) <mailto:(fernandez /at/ gsu.edu)>) and Juan Poblete
((jpoblete /at/ ucsc.edu) <mailto:(jpoblete /at/ ucsc.edu)>).
*Deadline for abstracts: May 1, 2020*
*Notification of accepted abstracts by May 15, 2020*
*Deadline for complete selected essays: November 1, 2020*
*Language of submission: English*
*Style: MLA*
/Contributors of selected essays must secure permission to reproduce any
images./
*Héctor Fernández L'Hoeste *(Ph.D., Stony Brook University, 1996) is
professor at Georgia State University in Atlanta, Georgia, where he
teaches cultural studies. He is the author of /Narrativas de
representación urbana/ (Peter Lang, 1998) and /Lalo Alcaraz: Political
Cartooning in the Latino Community/ (University of Mississippi Press,
2017), and editor of /Rockin’ Las Americas/ (with Deborah Pacini
Hernández and Eric Zolov, University of Pittsburgh Press, 2004),
/Redrawing the Nation/ (with Juan Poblete, Palgrave Macmillan, 2009),
/Cumbia!/ (with Pablo Vila, Duke University Press, 2013), /Sports and
Nationalism in Latin/o America/ (with Robert McKee Irwin and Juan
Poblete, Palgrave Macmillan, 2015) and /Sound, Image, and National
Imaginary in the Construction of Latin/o American Identities/ (with
Pablo Vila, Lexington Books, 2018). His articles on media and cultural
theory have appeared in /Hispania/, /Chasqui/, /National
Identities/,/Objeto Visual/, /Revista de Estudios Colombianos, //Revista
Iberoamericana/, /Revista Latinoamericana de Estudios sobre la
Historieta/ (Cuba), /Cenizas/ (Mexico), and /Film Quarterly/, among
others. In addition, he has published work in /Imagination Beyond
Nation/ (Pittsburgh, 1998), /Imagining Our Americas/ (Duke, 2007), and
/Cultures of the City/ (Pittsburgh, 2010), among others. He is editor of
two academic series: with Pablo Vila, he edits the Music, Culture, and
Identity in Latin America series for Lexington Books; and with Juan
Carlos Rodríguez, he publishes Reframing Media, Technology, and Culture
in Latin/o America for the University of Florida Press. In 2018,
together with Robert McKee Irwin and Juan Poblete, he published the
Spanish translation of /Sports and Nationalism in Latin/o America/,
titled/Deportes y nacionalismo en América Latina /(Cuarto Propio). He’s
currently completing the translation of the forthcoming /Travels to the
Land of Oblivion: Modernity and Colombian Identity in the Work of Carlos
Vives and La Provincia /(Lexington Books) and, together with Juan Carlos
Rodríguez, an edited volume titled/Digital Humanities in Latin America/
(University of Florida Press). He’s also working on a coming monograph
titled /Vicious /Muñequitos/: Memory, Nation, and Violence in Latin/x
American Comics/.
*Juan Poblete*, Professor of Latin/o American Literature and Cultural
Studies, University of California, Santa Cruz. Author of /La Escritura
de Pedro Lemebel como proyecto cultural y político/, (Santiago: Cuarto
Propio, 2019); /Hacia una historia de la lectura y la pedagogía
literaria en América Latina/, (Santiago: Cuarto Propio, 2019); and
/Literatura chilena del siglo XIX: entre públicos lectores y figuras
autoriales/ (Santiago: Cuarto Propio, 2003 and 2018); editor of
/Critical Latin American and Latino Studies/ (University of Minnesota
Press, 2003) and /New Approaches to Latin American Studies: Culture and
Power/ (Routledge, 2017); and co-editor of /Piracy and Intellectual
Property in Latin America: Rethinking Creativity and the Common Good/
(Routledge, 2020), /Precarity and Belonging://Labor, Migration, and
Noncitizenship/(Rutgers University Press, 2020), /Andrés Bello/ (with
Beatriz Gonzalez-Stephan, IILI, 2009),/ Redrawing The Nation: National
Identities in Latin/o American Comics /(with Héctor Fernández L'Hoeste,
Palgrave, 2009), /Desdén al infortunio: Sujeto, comunicación y público
en la narrativa de Pedro Lemebel/ (with Fernando Blanco, Santiago:
Cuarto Propio, 2010), /Sports and Nationalism in Latin America /(with
Héctor Fernández L’Hoeste and Robert McKee-Irwin, Palgrave, 2015), and
/Humor in Latin American Cinema/(with Juana Suárez, Palgrave, 2015).
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