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[Commlist] Call for Papers, NCA Preconference on “Rhetoric as Nature: Considering the Role of Cosmologies, Ecologies, and Economies in Honoring Place"
Wed Jul 13 11:01:22 GMT 2022
Matthew Bost: (bostmw /at/ whitman.edu) <mailto:(bostmw /at/ whitman.edu)>
Preconference Date: November 16, 2022
Deadline for Submissions: August 31, 2022
The Economics, Communication and Society division of the National
Communication Association, in conjunction with the Rhetorical and
Communication Theory and Environmental Communication divisions, invites
submissions to an NCA preconference on the theme “Rhetoric as Nature:
Considering the Role of Cosmologies, Ecologies, and Economies in
Honoring PLACE”, which will take place on November 16, 2022 ahead of
NCA's annual meeting in New Orleans, LA.
The concept of nature has long been subject to critical discussion
across the humanities and social sciences, but the past few decades have
also seen new conceptions of nature emerge, particularly in terms of
cosmology, ecology, and economy. Scholars working from these
perspectives have advocated for a recentering of the reciprocal
obligations inherent in human relationships to other beings and
phenomena—land, water, plants, and other beings that constitute the
places within which communities are embedded. Pursuing newly just and
equitable relations is hampered by capitalist modernity's totalizing
cosmology, its denial of agency to the nonhuman, and its suppression of
and attacks on difference along racial, ethnic, class-oriented, ableist,
and gendered lines. The preconference embraces the challenge to
cultivate an ethos responsible for all worldly actants. We invite many
interdisciplinary perspectives, including theories of decoloniality, the
redressing of anti-Blackness, feminisms and queer theory, critical
engagements with disability, radical democracy, and ontological and
political engagements with posthumanism and new materialism. We
encourage contributors to consider “Rhetoric as Nature” as a provocation
oriented on three key terms–cosmologies, ecologies, and economies–each
of which constitute rhetorical processes that materialize out of nature
and in turn transform our sense of what nature can signify and become in
theory and practice.
A cosmologyin its most basic sense refers to a given people’s way of
relating to a larger cosmic sense of place, functioning as a core set of
doxathat structure a given culture’s imaginative horizons and the social
norms and forms of conduct that are thinkable within it. Many Indigenous
knowledge traditions and those of the Global South, as well as scholars
working in feminist science studies, have turned to cosmologies as a way
of considering the forms of relation encouraged or foreclosed in
particular cosmologies, and offered cosmologies that seek to repair
environmental damage as well as disrupting modernity’s totalizing (and
colonizing) cosmological vision. Rhetoric as nature, viewed from a
cosmological perspective, enables the exploration of both non-Western
cosmologies and Western imaginaries that have been historically
disparaged, asking: how can we we create a relational politics
responsive to earthly and cosmic heterogeneity?
In addition to its cosmological implications, this preconference
considers “Rhetoric as Nature” from the perspective of ecologies.
Scholarship indebted to new materialism and various critical materialist
traditions has emphasized that human rhetorical and social processes are
coproduced within vast webs of more-than-human life. Such scholarship
has emphasized capitalism’s creation of hierarchies between human and
nonhuman being, leading to the exploitation of “nature” treated in the
abstract as well as to the ongoing precarity of the majority of the
world’s human population. To address this situation, other
ecologically-inclined scholars have drawn attention to the interspecies
relations and alternative worlds thriving throughout and alongside
capitalism. Within this framework, rhetoric—another art of
seeing—becomes a phenomenological practice of feeling/thinking diverse
social, political, and economic relationalities. Such ecological
attunements acquire particular urgency in a moment when a multitude of
crises—from global pandemic and increasing precarity to the
deforestation, environmental disasters, and food and water scarcity
wrought by climate change—are growing ever more destructive.
Finally, this preconference invites a consideration of “Rhetoric as
Nature” from the perspective of economies. While neoliberal capitalism
has embraced complexity and systems theory to underwrite its ideologies
of individual action and market competition, there are a number of
alternative economic approaches that embrace the cosmological and
ecological alternatives discussed above. Ranging from discussions of the
oppressive racial order underpinning the modern political economic
subject to perspectives rooted in feminist and anarchist politics of
care and mutual aid to Marxian affirmations of the common as an axis for
envisioning an alternative economic order, these approaches pose the
question of the economic practices and forms of organization that might
produce less oppressive futures. We invite engagements that further
conversations between the rhetorical study of economics and the
worldmaking projects of different ecologies and cosmologies, whether
from the perspectives of ideology critique, biopolitics, psychoanalysis,
affect theory, new materialism, theories of publics, or any of the many
other perspectives that have shaped the rhetorical study of economics.
In order to prompt fruitful conversation and debate, we seek papers that
respond to the provocation “Rhetoric as Nature” from within each of
these perspectives, as well as by highlighting points of conversation
between them. How does conceiving of rhetoric as an economic process
impact the way cosmologies and ecosystems are understood rhetorically?
How does approaching rhetoric in terms of cosmological or ecological
processes shed new light on what different approaches to an economy can
mean for the constituents that comprise it? In addition to producing
connections between these perspectives, this preconference also seeks to
highlight points of productive tension. For example, not only do
tensions exist between different materialist approaches to rhetoric as
nature (for example, between new materialist approaches that affirm the
vibrancy of all matter and historical materialist approaches that focus
on the figure of the human as a site of social struggle and potential
emancipation), these tensions prompt further conversation between
various materialist approaches to the preconference theme and approaches
that affirm reciprocity with nonhuman beings through spirit and
ceremony, as well as the work of scholars like Kim Tallbear and Zoe
Todd, who have sought to recenter Indigenous and other non-Western
thought in conversations about the nonhuman and pointed out the
potentially colonizing implications of a materialist approach. These
differences carry vital ethical and political implications for
conversations including the relationship of vocabularies of immanence
and materiality to a variety of spiritual traditions that affirm the
nonhuman, the role of social movement advocacy in challenging human
exceptionalism, and the desirability of “liberation” or “emancipation”
as alternatives to human exceptionalism, to name just a few.
To further these conversations, we especially seek submissions that
enlist cosmological, ecological, and economic perspectives on rhetoric
as nature as part of critical projects that develop feminist, queer,
decolonial, and dis/ability perspectives, or that examine the power
dynamics of contemporary capitalism. We are further interested in papers
that attempt to mark the boundaries of specific rhetorical ontologies,
address how to create multiple worlds, discuss the work of rhetoric’s
simultaneous meaning-making and place-making, theorize the rhetorical
production of new economic models, engage the COVID pandemic, and
forward Indigenous cosmologies and/or unearth alternative Western ones.
Finally, we are interested in papers that address the methods,
technologies, and disciplinary practices that enable diverse
implementations of rhetoric as nature to flourish.
.
In addition to panel discussions focused on the above themes, the
preconference will host a plenary session featuring scholars in rhetoric
and indigenous studies whose work stages a conversation between
economic, ecological, and cosmological approaches to “Rhetoric as
Nature”, bringing out resonances and productive tensions between these
approaches. Our plenary speakers are Bernard Perley(Associate Professor,
Critical Indigenous Studies, University of British Columbia), Thomas
Rickert (Professor of English, Purdue University), and Catherine Chaput
(Professor of English, Fordham University).
We will also host a keynote address byDr. Jason W. Moore, Professor of
Sociology at SUNY Binghamton. Dr. Moore is the author of Capitalism in
the Web of Life, coauthor (with Raj Patel) of A History of the World in
Seven Cheap Things, and editor of Anthropocene or Capitalocene?: Nature,
History and the Crisis of Capitalism. Dr. Moore’s work focuses on the
history of capitalism from a “world-ecological” perspective that
emphasizes the ways that what are often thought to be separate spheres
of human action and nonhuman nature are co-produced. In considering the
ways capital and colonialism extract value from life-processes that have
been turned into “cheap things,” and in advocating for a reparative
ecology aimed at producing less destructive forms of life beyond
capital, Dr. Moore’s work cuts across both the critical projects and
affirmative possibilities designated by “Rhetoric as Nature”.
Scholars interested in submitting to the preconference as a presenter
should provide a presentation title, an abstract of no more than 250
words, and their author and institutional information to Matthew Bost
((bostmw /at/ whitman.edu) <mailto:(bostmw /at/ whitman.edu)>) no later than /August
31, 2022/. We also welcome those who would like to attend, but not
present. Scholars interested in participating in the preconference as
audience members should send their name and institutional affiliation to
Matthew Bost ((bostmw /at/ whitman.edu) <mailto:(bostmw /at/ whitman.edu)>) no later
than /August 31, 2022/. Participants will be notified of acceptance in
mid-to-late September.
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