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[Commlist] Comunicação e Sociedade | Call for papers | Historical reparations: Destabilising constructions from the colonial past
Wed Nov 17 22:05:34 GMT 2021
*[NEW DEADLINE] Comunicação e Sociedade | Call for papers | Historical
reparations: Destabilising constructions from the colonial past*
**
*Editors*: Vítor de Sousa (CECS, University of Minho, Portugal), Sheila
Khan (CECS, University of Minho, Portugal) and Pedro Schacht Pereira
(Ohio State University, USA)
The contestation of ethnocentrism by post-colonial critique, among other
consequences, has questioned various panegyrics of memory in public
space. Concepts whose mission was to confer stability on the social
world are therefore being questioned today and are becoming increasingly
obsolete. In this specific case, there is the idea of the museum and
other manifestations in the public space, such as statuary. In addition,
issues considered to be fractious, such as systemic racism, the survival
of old colonial logics of racialisation and racial surveillance, and the
struggles for gender equality, are adding up against the /status quo/.
The study of the past serves as an ethical, moral and civic stance to
reflect on the permanence of old logics of coloniality that permeate
current social, political, historical and cultural contexts. From the
experience of globalisation, we realise that the contemporary world is
interdependent and that globalisation, even with all the criticisms
associated with it, allows other modes of relationship, sustained, for
example, in an alterglobalist logic (Hardt & Negri, 2019). In this
sense, it is relevant to highlight the argument that the world is
neither static nor historically homogeneous. The mindset of Western
modernity underpinned its ideology, through hegemony, violence,
racialisation and racial surveillance, on this premise: to flatten the
world of human diversity according to criteria that excluded all those
who did not fit into the grand narrative and grammar of Western
progress, civilisation and development. This historical and ontological
erasure has condemned thousands and thousands of human beings to
backwardness. No latitude in the world has escaped this praxis, with
Western modernity being tentacular and agile in its mechanisms and
devices of domination, appropriation and regulation.
The confrontation with the colonial system until post-colonialism was a
painful, bruising and tortuous path, requiring an exercise of collective
memory duty. Today, to understand the legacies of this modern
coloniality, it is relevant to place at the heart of academic and civil
debate the multiple voices and narratives. Those will contribute to a
more profound and comprehensive mapping of the mechanisms of the
colonial past still active in our contemporaneity. The memories,
narratives, manifestos, social activism and the debates around
recognition and historical reparation, mirrored in public and media
communication processes, have become, from a cultural and political
point of view, fertile ground and a commitment to historical
introspection. Challenging battles are fought for the construction of a
more just, equitable and repairing narrative.
This volume of /Comunicação e Sociedade/ focuses on the rich
interdisciplinary commitment to an attentive and intelligent dialogue
between the legacies of coloniality and the current processes of
historical reparation in various dimensions of human historicity. With
this approach, we intend to invite scholars from various parts of the
world to take up this urgent and necessary challenge for the memory of
future generations and the problematisation of communication phenomena.
Paper proposals should address one or more of the following topics:
– Legacies of coloniality. New mappings on racialisation processes and
racial surveillance;
– From coloniality as opposition to interculturality;
– Luso-tropicalism and its current repercussions on Portuguese society;
– Decolonisation of museums, statues and other public monuments;
– Fetishism and abolitionism;
– Art, memory and post-colonial literature;
– The role of post-memory as a duty of memory;
– Historical reparation. Memory, slavery and race;
– Historical reparation. Humanistic genetics and race;
– Black Lives Matter as a reparations movement;
– Curatorial artivism: how can organised groups or individuals offer
narratives towards reinterpreting colonial public statuary and other
equipment?
– Digital networks and intercultural dynamics;
– Digitisation of cultures and arts;
– Political confrontations in the media space: Nationalism and populism
vs historical reparation;
– New tools of coloniality: Big Data and Algorithms;
– Media discourses, memory and transformation.
**
*KEY DATES*
Deadline for submission: *December 2 2021*
Notification of acceptance: January 21 2022
Deadline for the complete and translated: March 18 2022
Publication: June 2022
*LANGUAGE*
Papers can be submitted in English or Portuguese. At the peer-review
process, the authors of selected articles should ensure the translation
of their article. The editors shall have the final decision on the
publication of the article.
*EDITING AND SUBMISSION*
/Comunicação e Sociedade/ is an open-access academic journal, operating
according to demanding standards of the peer-review system, and operates
on a double-blind peer-review process. After submission, each paper will
be distributed to two reviewers. previously invited to evaluate it
according to its academic quality, originality and relevance to the
objectives and scope of the theme of this issue of the journal.
Originals should be submitted through the journal’s website
(https://revistacomsoc.pt/ <https://revistacomsoc.pt/>). When accessing
/Comunicação e Sociedade/ for the first time, you must register before
submitting your article (instructions to register here -
https://revistacomsoc.pt/user/register
<https://revistacomsoc.pt/user/register>).
Refer to the guidelines for authors here
(https://revistacomsoc.pt/about/submissions
<https://revistacomsoc.pt/about/submissions>)
For further information, please contact:
(comunicacaoesociedade /at/ ics.uminho.pt)
<mailto:(comunicacaoesociedade /at/ ics.uminho.pt)>
*References*
Hardt, M. & Negri, A. (2019). Empire, twenty years on. New Left Review,
120, 67-92.
No payment from the authors will be required.
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