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[Commlist] CFP Spectator Special Issue "Waste"
Mon Nov 08 19:04:57 GMT 2021
Deadline Approaching - Call for Papers Spectator Special Issue: “Waste”
Volume 42.2 (Fall 2022) Edited by: Eszter Zimanyi
Description of topic
Look around and all the eyes can see is waste. From piles of face masks
used during the COVID-19 pandemic to heaps of fake lifejackets left
behind by migrants along Europe’s shores, we seem to be surrounded by
discarded objects—used, abused, and left behind. As climate change
accelerates and racial capitalism continues its relentless agenda of
extraction and consumption, human and nonhuman life grows increasingly
disposable as well. Despite—or perhaps because of—ongoing calls for
better “management,” governments seem more than willing to sacrifice the
elderly, disabled, and poor in order to “save” the economy. Over the
past few years, we have watched states detain migrant children in cages
and abandon refugees stranded at sea. We have witnessed communities
around the world endure increasingly extreme weather events while
environmental regulations are dismantled by autocrats and democrats alike.
Waste, materially and conceptually, is marked by a certain excess. The
term ‘waste’ can signal excessive practices of extraction and
production, or improper habits of consumption (wasting food, wasteful
spending). It can describe an excess of the body (excrement), and the
refusal or inability to make the body productive (wasted talent, waste
of time, to waste away from disease or malnourishment). As a verb,
‘waste’ can also mark excessive acts of destruction (laying to waste).
Across these uses, waste seems to connote a transgression, a violation
of an intended order.
This special issue of Spectator asks what media studies can tell us
about our waste-full world. How do we come to understand what is
valuable and what can be thrown away? What role does media play in
producing and representing waste? How does a logic of disposability
shape labor practices in media industries? And how can media studies
help us reclaim the discarded and forgotten, and revitalize it anew?
We encourage essays that span a wide range of historical and
geographical case studies and that take an expansive approach to the
definition of media. We welcome both single-authored and co-authored
submissions as well as non-traditional submissions, including
photo-essays, critical creative writing, and interviews with
media-makers engaging waste.
Possible topics include, but are not limited to:
Wasteful media (such as e-waste, disposable cameras, film stock,
media infrastructures, etc.) Aesthetics of waste and disposability
(including theories of the “poor image”) Media representations of
waste Environmental media and eco-criticism The “forensic turn”
in media studies Temporalities of waste and degradation Wasting
time Mediatizing bodies as waste / wasted bodies Making media
from waste (recycling, remixing, reimagining waste) Book reviews of
recent scholarship examining media in relationship to waste, pollution,
disposability, and sustainability
Deadline for Submission: November 20, 2021
Spectator is a biannual publication by the University of Southern
California, School of Cinematic Arts, Division of Cinema & Media Studies.
Manuscripts to be considered for publication should be sent via email to:
Eszter Zimanyi, Issue Editor Division of Cinema and Media Studies School
of Cinematic Arts, Room 320 University of Southern California Los
Angeles, CA 90089-2211 Email: (zimanyi /at/ usc.edu)
Submissions should be e-mailed directly to the issue editor. Manuscripts
should include the title of the contribution, name of author(s), postal
address, e-mail address, and a phone number for the author who will work
with the editor on revisions. Contributions should be between 3,000 -
5,000 words. Please include a brief abstract and author bio for
publicity purposes.
Articles submitted should not be under consideration by any other journals.
Book Reviews may vary in length from 300 to 1,000 words. Please include
title of book, retail price and ISBN at the beginning of the review.
Additional section contributions can include interviews, works about new
archival or research facilities as well as newly developed methods
related to the field.
Authors should send copies of their work via e-mail as electronic
attachments. Files should be formatted in the latest version of
Microsoft Word and endnotes should conform to the Chicago Manual of Style.
Upon acceptance, a detailed format/style sheet will be forwarded to all
contributors as to the requirements for the submission of images and text.
For questions or enquiries about this CFP or review process, please
contact the Issue Editor: (zimanyi /at/ usc.edu)
Current Board for Spectator Founding Editor: Marsha Kinder Managing
Editor: William Whittington Issue Editor: Eszter Zimanyi
Subscription Information
Individual issues cost $15.00. Institutional rate for US and Canadian
customers is $30.00 USD. The rate for customers outside of North America
is $40.00 USD. To order a subscription, please send checks to:
University of Southern California School of Cinematic Arts Cinema &
Media Studies SCA, Room 320 Los Angeles, CA 90089-2211 Attn: Spectator
Subscription
Tel: (213) 740-3334 Fax: (213) 740-9471
Please indicate which issues you are ordering. For back issues, contact
subscription manager and include a check for $15.00 per issue.
Email: (Spectator /at/ cinema.usc.edu)
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