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[Commlist] Call for Papers: Chaos (Excursions Journal)
Tue Jan 07 21:37:43 GMT 2020
Call for Papers - Excursions 10.2: Chaos
"There is no time for despair, no place for self-pity, no need for
silence, no room for fear. We speak, we write, we do language. That is
how civilizations heal. I know the world is bruised and bleeding, and
though it is important not to ignore its pain, it is also critical to
refuse to succumb to its malevolence. Like failure, chaos contains
information that can lead to knowledge — even wisdom." (Toni Morrison,
The Nation, 2015)
Classical and early modern philosophy widely privileged the “logos” i.e.
the logical, organized view of the universe, which still has
considerable influence on the popular as well as the scientific
perception of the world through the binary “order vs. disorder.”
However, modern scholarship has long ago destabilized this false
dichotomy, and chaos has captured the imagination of philosophers,
scientists and artists alike for many generations. Mathematicians
proposed a theory of chaos which accounts for the unpredictable
character of deterministic systems; quantum physicists have established
the fundamental uncertainty inherent to the structure of matter; and
postmodernist scholars in the humanities and social sciences are arguing
for the acceptance of the ambiguity, fluidity and fragmentation of the
human condition.
Concurrently, environmental and social disasters, economical and
political crisis, violent and unceasing conflicts inhabit our
imaginaries as chaotic aspects of our daily lives. The climate
emergency, the migration crisis, and the general turmoil of contemporary
cities have been framed as chaos. The demands of an overgrowing market
of consumption, the fluctuating network of algorithms and data, and the
fluidity of the line between private and public can lead to chaos.
Likewise, chaos can be found in messy teenagers’ bedrooms, non-linear
thought processes, and even your own set of chaotic data.
Within this scenario, Excursions invites researchers to embrace chaos
and investigate the complexities of society, nature, science and being
human. Is chaos a natural, universal phenomenon of "disorder" or a
perspective-bound construct? What meanings and functions can we
attribute to chaos in theory and practice? How can chaos aid
contemporary scholarship in its quest to understand the complexity of
our lived experience?
In this issue, Excursions seeks to assemble a collection of
interdisciplinary articles (Media and Communications scholars are more
than welcome!) that reflect on the concept of chaos, whether as a
natural phenomenon in an objective reality or as a socially-constructed
subjective phenomenon. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
- Chaos as a metaphysical concept or theory
- Chaos as a process in the biological, physical and social world
- Chaos as a theme in popular culture and political discourse
- Chaos as fuel to incite change
- Chaos as a source of creativity
- Chaos as constructed by ideology and epistemology
- Chaos as part of a research method
Please submit your paper by 17 February 2020 via our website:
https://excursions-journal.sussex.ac.uk/. If you have trouble with our
submission system, please email us at
(enquiries /at/ excursions-journal.org.uk)
<mailto:(enquiries /at/ excursions-journal.org.uk)>.
Manuscripts should be no longer than 5,000 words, with citations and
bibliography in Harvard style. More information about Author Guidelines
can be found here. Alongside traditional academic articles, we also
consider alternative ways of communicating research (please contact the
editorial staff prior to submission). We encourage submission as soon as
possible, as we accept and publish articles on a rolling basis.
Excursions is an Open Access Publication and there are no processing or
publication charges.
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