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[Commlist] Call for Papers: Transnational Queer Cultures and Digital Media
Tue May 09 16:23:17 GMT 2023
Call for Papers
Transnational Queer Cultures and Digital Media
Special Issue of/Communication, Culture & Critique/
Co-Editors: Yener Bayramoğlu, Łukasz Szulc, Radhika Gajjala
Extended Abstracts (about 1,500 words, excluding references) Deadline:
1st June 2023
Complete Manuscript (max. 7000 words, including references) Deadline:
1st Sept 2023
Publication Date: September 2024
Extended abstracts should be emailed to: (y.bayramoglu /at/ mmu.ac.uk),
(lukasz.szulc /at/ manchester.ac.uk) & (radhik /at/ bgsu.edu) (include all email
addresses).
Queer cultures have long been transnational. People not conforming to
traditional gender and sexual roles have long exchanged letters,
magazines, or films across borders and traveled to different places to
fulfill themselves or meet others (Loist, 2018; Szulc, 2018).
In times
of rapid technological developments, large migration flows, and intense
cross-cultural exchange, queer connections take on new forms and
meanings that develop at the intersection of intertwined scales: urban,
regional, national, continental, and global; physical and digital
(Friedman, 2017; Pain, 2022; Ramos & Mowlabocus, 2020).
While exciting new research into queer digital cultures has been growing
exponentially in the last three decades—including works that go beyond
the dominant Anglo-American and Eurocentric perspectives—most academic
studies on the topic fall within the confines of national case studies.
Nations have not faded into oblivion in the 21st century as they
continue to shape the legislative, political, and social conditions, and
provide meaningful cultural contexts for queer lives. However, other
scales—as well as their imbrication—remain equally important; especially
now when, arguably, digital technologies accelerate the transnational
interactions and transformations of culture (Brunton, 2022; Szulc, 2023).
Rethinking digital queer cultures from the vantage point of the
transnational inevitably foregrounds the modes of becoming beyond gender
and sexual identity. The transnational perspective does not only bring
questions of how queerness is imagined, experienced, and practiced
through digital media across time and space but also how it is entangled
with postcoloniality and digital border regimes (Bayramoğlu & Lünenborg,
2018; Boston, 2016; Shield, 2019). As the worrying developments in
several countries over the last decade have shown, digital media open
doors for equally transnational and digital mobilizations fueled by
anti-queer and anti-trans ideologies, racism, and hate speech (Nash &
Browne, 2020; Righetti, 2021). Moreover, digital media technologies turn
queer lifeworlds into data (Bivens, 2017; Guyan, 2022), ready to be used
and abused by national state institutions, international organizations,
and multinational corporations.
This Special Issue will address the ambivalences of contemporary queer
cultures by zooming in on their intrinsic transnational and digital
condition. We invite research-based, theoretically informed, and
critically oriented contributions on queer digital cultures that go
beyond methodological nationalism. Single or comparative national case
studies are welcome insofar as they contextualize the national in
relation to other relevant scales of analysis. We seek contributions
that highlight the importance of queer transnational cultures,
especially in contexts that are underrepresented in Anglophone academia,
and that challenge the tendencies towards universalizing digital queer
cultures of the Global North.
There are no article processing charges required.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
- Global platforms, infrastructures, and data affecting queer cultures
- Queer transnational counterpublics and safe spaces on the internet
- Queer digital activism and solidarity across national borders
- Hybridization and creolization of queer cultures through digital media
- Queer content creators and their international audiences
- Queers’ use of local, national, and global social media platforms and apps
- Queer films, shows, and videos on transnational digital media platforms
- Queering digital diaspora, digital border, and migration
- Mediated transnational and migrant cultures of sex, romance, and dating
- Digital gender diversity, trans cultures, and anti-trans campaigns
- Digital media and queers in times of conflicts, disasters, and
displacements
- Race, ethnicity, nationality, language, and religion in queer digital
cultures
- Postcolonial and decolonial perspectives on queer digital cultures
Yener Bayramoğlu (he/him) is a Marie Skłodowska-Curie Postdoctoral
Fellow at Manchester Metropolitan University, United Kingdom. His
research focuses on queer migration, digital media, communication
history, borders, hate speech, and disinformation. His current work
explores media practices of belonging within queer diaspora. He is the
author of Queere Un/Sichtbarkeiten (Queer In/Visibilities: The History
of Queer Representation in Turkish and German Tabloid Journalism) and
co-author of Post/pandemisches Leben (Post/Pandemic Life: A New Theory
of Fragility), both published in Germany. His work has been published in
several peer-reviewed journals including Media, Culture & Society and
Ethnic & Racial Studies.
Łukasz Szulc (he/him) is a Senior Lecturer (Associate Professor) in
Digital Media and Culture at the University of Manchester, United
Kingdom. He specializes in critical and cultural studies of digital
media at the intersections of gender, sexuality, and transnationalism.
His publications include a monograph Transnational Homosexuals in
Communist Poland: Cross-Border Flows in Gay and Lesbian Magazines
(Palgrave, 2018), an edited collection LGBTQs, Media, and Culture in
Europe (Routledge, 2016), and articles in such journals as Communication
Theory, New Media & Society, and Social Media + Society. Łukasz sat on
the board of directors at the International Communication Association
(ICA) and was a co-chair of ICA’s LGBTQ Studies interest group between
2017 and 2021. He is a member of editorial boards at the International
Journal of Cultural Studies, International Journal of Communication, and
Communication, Culture & Critique.
Radhika Gajjala (she/her) is a Professor of Media and Communication and
of American Culture Studies at Bowling Green State University, United
States. Her books include: Digital Diasporas: Labor and Affect in
Gendered Indian Digital Publics (2019), Online Philanthropy in the
Global North and South: Connecting, Microfinancing, and Gaming for
Change (2017), Cyberculture and the Subaltern (Lexington Press, 2012),
and Cyberselves: Feminist Ethnographies of South Asian Women (Altamira,
2004). She has co-edited collections on Cyberfeminism 2.0 (2012), Global
Media Culture and Identity (2011), South Asian Technospaces (2008) and
Webbing Cyberfeminist Practice (2008). She has been co-editor of the
journal Ada: A Journal of Gender and New Media and continues with the
Fembot Collective as Managing Editor. She is currently working on a book
with Rutgers Press on Global South Activist Digital Publics.
Detailed Publication Timeline
1st June 2023 Deadline for extended abstracts (1,500 words)
15th June 2023 SI editors get back to authors with decisions
1st September 2023 Deadline for the first full drafts sent to
SI editors (7,000 words)
1st October 2023 SI editors get back to authors with feedback
1st December 2023 Deadline for the final submission to the
journal
September 2024 Publication date
References
Bayramoğlu, Yener & Lünenborg, Margreth (2018). Queer migration and
digital affects: Refugees navigating from the Middle East via Turkey to
Germany. Sexuality & Culture, 22(4), 1019-1036.
Bivens, Rena (2017). The gender binary will not be deprogrammed: Ten
years of coding gender on Facebook. New Media & Society, 19(6), 880-898.
Boston, Nicholas (2016). Libidinal cosmopolitanism: The case of digital
sexual encounters in postenlargement Europe. In: S. Ponzanesi, and G.
Colpani (Eds.) Postcolonial Transitions in Europe: Contexts, Practices
and Politics (pp. 291–312). Rowman & Littlefield.
Brunton, Douglas-Wade (2022). The digital Creole. International Journal
of Cultural Studies, 25(5), 492-499.
Friedman, Elisabeth Jay (2017). Interpreting the Internet: Feminist and
Queer Counterpublics in Latin America. University of California Press.
Guyan, Kevin (2022). Queer Data: Using Gender, Sex and Sexuality Data
for Action. Bloomsbury.
Loist, Skadi (2018). Crossover dreams: Global circulation of queer film
on the film festival circuits. Diogenes, 62(1), 57-72.
Nash, Catherine Jean & Browne, Kath (2020). Heteroactivism: Resisting
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Trans Rights and Equalities. Zed Books.
Pain, Paromita (Ed.) (2022). LGBTQ Digital Cultures: A Global
Perspective. Routledge.
Ramos, Regner & Mowlabocus, Sharif (Eds.) (2020). Queer Sites in Global
Contexts: Technologies, Spaces and Otherness. Routledge.
Righetti, Nicola (2021). The anti-gender debate on social media. A
computational communication science analysis of networks, activism, and
misinformation. Comunicazione Politica, 23(2), 223-250.
Shield, Andrew DJ (2019). Immigrants on Grindr: Race, Sexuality and
Belonging Online. Palgrave Macmillan.
Szulc, Łukasz (2018). Transnational Homosexuals in Communist Poland:
Cross-Border Flows in Gay and Lesbian Magazines. Palgrave Macmillan.
Szulc, Łukasz (2023). Culture is transnational. International Journal of
Cultural Studies, 26(1), 3-15.
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