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[Commlist] Edited Book CFP - Warscapes: Mediating Militarized Environments
Tue Dec 05 11:58:48 GMT 2023
Call for chapter proposals for edited volume
/Warscapes: Mediating Militarized Environments/
Edited by Cortland Rankin (Bowling Green State University) and Brady
Fletcher (University of Rochester)
The portmanteau “warscape” that forms the title of this edited volume
suggests a complex linkage between war, often thought of in purely
anthropocentric terms, and the physical environment. On one hand,
warfare is inescapably shaped by the environmental contexts in which it
occurs. Geography, topography, biology, hydrology, and meteorology all
have significant strategic and tactical implications as advantages to be
exploited or as obstacles to be overcome. War also has the potential to
radically transform any environment it touches, from densely populated
cities to remote wildernesses. It can reduce buildings to rubble,
disable critical infrastructural systems, annihilate sites of cultural
memory, and remake, pollute, and poison the land, sea, and air. The
environmental impact of war and militarization more broadly extends well
beyond the combat zone too, from the extraction of natural resources and
the disposal of toxic waste products to the strategic mobilization of
agriculture and the construction of vast military bases. The
militarization of environments can proceed even in the absence of active
conflict, as is evidenced in recent decades by the reconfiguration of
so-called high-value sites – from financial districts, government
buildings, and sports stadiums to pipelines, cell towers, and grain
storage facilities – as potential targets in need of securing. And, of
course, the environmental after-effects of war and military
operations/occupations linger long after the fighting stops, with
profound ramifications for both recovery and remembrance. Indeed,
ecocidal violence can be understood as ongoing, often invisible, and
sometimes even far outside of what human beings might consider spaces of
war or conflict.
As the term “warscape” implies, however, this book is not only about the
intersection of war and the environment; it also centers a third crucial
component – mediation. From film and television to social media and
video games, audiovisual media can provide unique means for documenting,
narrativizing, propagating, and critiquing militarized environments. At
the same time, media technologies mobilized for the purposes of sensing,
surveillance, targeting, etc. can also actively shape the outcomes of
war. At the heart of this book is the convergence of war, environment,
and media, each of which will be broadly defined. Although war will
undoubtedly be a primary focus of the book, it will also acknowledge a
wide range of military activities beyond active warfare, including less
explicit forms of militarization as well as the ideology of militarism
itself. “Environment” as a concept will also be left intentionally broad
to include both built, social spaces as well as non-human ecological
worlds. Lastly, the definition of “media” will remain open to account
for the range of ways in which militarized environments can be mediated.
Avenues of inquiry may include, but are not limited to:
*
Representations of urban/suburban/rural spaces and communities at
war in film and television, social media, video games, or other
audiovisual media.
*
Space and place-based studies of location shooting in war
film/TV/video game production.
*
Media and the militarization of infrastructure.
*
Phenomenological/experiential accounts of militarized environments.
*
The role of militarized technologies in sensing, surveilling, and
targeting environments.
*
The relationship between particular forms of audiovisual media and
the broader visual cultures that inform their representations of
militarized environments.
*
Militarized environments and cultural memory.
*
Documenting the environmental impacts of war both within and outside
conflict zones.
*
Environmental justice perspectives on war that account for
disproportionate impacts on the basis of race, class, and/or gender.
*
Ecocritical approaches to war film/TV/social media/video games.
*
Media that strive to offer ecocentric perspectives in order to
reorient or reframe common anthropocentric notions of conflict and war.
*
Rethinking war through ecological elements as media (e.g.,
radiation, oil, air, sound).
The book will be submitted to Rutgers University Press’ War Culture
series. Read more about the series here:_
_https://www.rutgersuniversitypress.org/search-results-grid/?series=war-culture
<https://www.rutgersuniversitypress.org/search-results-grid/?series=war-culture>.
Chapters should be at most 8,500 words, inclusive of notes.
Interested contributors should submit a 300-word abstract of your
proposed chapter and a 100-word bio to Cortland Rankin ((rankicw /at/ bgsu.edu)
<mailto:(rankicw /at/ bgsu.edu)>) and Brady Fletcher
((brady.fletcher /at/ rochester.edu) <mailto:(brady.fletcher /at/ rochester.edu)>) by
February 16, 2024. Authors will be informed of the selection by early
March. The due date for chapter drafts will be July 1, 2024, with
revision requests returned to you by early August 2024 and your
revisions due back by October 1, 2024. Our current goal is to have the
volume finalized and sent to the publisher by late 2024, with the book
expected to be published in 2025. Inquiries should be directed to the
email addresses above.
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