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[Commlist] CFP: Posthumanism and Media Studies
Fri Aug 25 20:46:37 GMT 2023
Call posted online: 
https://journals.tplondon.com/jp/announcement/view/65 
<https://journals.tplondon.com/jp/announcement/view/65>
*Theme and Scope:*
/The Journal of Posthumanism/(Transnational Press) invites submissions 
for a special issue exploring the intersection of posthumanism and media 
studies.
Posthumanism fosters a more inclusive and less hierarchical approach to 
our entanglements with both human and non-human elements. Posthuman 
theory, particularly as articulated by N. Katherine Hayles and Rosi 
Braidotti, has long been influential in media studies. However, it has 
often been applied without a systematic or thoroughly developed 
methodology. Ferrando (2020) argues:
    “posthuman ethics invites us to follow on three related layers.
    First of all, as a post-humanism, it marks a shift: from
    universalism to perspectivism, from multiculturalism to pluralism
    and diversity. As a postanthropocentrism, it induces a change of
    strategy: from human agency to agential networks, from technology to
    eco-technology. As a postdualism, it requires an evolution of our
    awareness: from individuality to relationality, from theory to praxis.”
This Special Issue of the/Journal of Posthumanism/therefore asks, how 
does such posthuman perspectivism, pluralism, agentiality, 
eco-technology, relationality, and praxis, apply to the future of media 
and cultural studies? How might we understand the very concept of “future”?
Media is exploding at an ever-increasing pace across digital platforms, 
working with, through, and against new technological advances such as 
AI. These developments are also occurring during a time of global shifts 
that include pandemics and climate change. In light of these changes, it 
is the ideal time to provoke more conversations between media and 
cultural studies through Posthumanism.
Several approaches have been proposed that align media studies with or 
explicitly draw on posthuman concepts. In 2021,/Posthumanism in Art and 
Science: A Reader/was published, making the argument that “aesthetic 
production is a vital part of posthumanist thinking processes, which 
thereby grow ever more urgently relevant to social and ecological 
problem-solving.” (Aloi & McHugh, 2021, 2)  Recent studies have 
developed posthuman approaches to rhetorical practice (Boyle, 2018) and 
explored how we might understand the combination of humans and technical 
media as synthetic subjects (Wiley & Elam, 2018). Elsewhere, Iliadis 
(2013) proposed that a shift away from a cybernetic understanding of 
communication as a process of pre-existing agents that transmit messages 
to one another could offer the possibility for the development of a new 
underlying informational ontology for communication and media studies, 
which would lend itself to new methods. Such ontologies and methods have 
been explored in relation to media studies through, for example, 
posthuman approaches to autoethnographies and subjectivities (Wilde, 
2020; 2022). Monea and Packer (2016) have proposed a media genealogy 
approach that extends the type of work being done in media archaeology.
Building on this genealogical approach, Sylvia (2019; 2021) has argued 
that posthuman ethics, ontology, and epistemology could be adopted in 
media studies through a more explicit embrace of affirmative approaches 
such as counter-actualization, modulation, and counter-memory. 
Elsewhere, exploring the tensions and potential contradictions between 
the history of cultural studies and posthumanism, Cord (2022) asks, “can 
or should Cultural Studies and the nonhuman turn really be brought into 
the contact zone?” There are therefore a variety of possible responses 
and resonances between posthumanism and media studies.
We propose this special issue as an avenue to explore, extend, and 
develop a posthuman praxis for media studies. We invite researchers to 
explore themes related to these posthuman approaches. This might 
include, but is not limited to:
  * Pieces that build on or extend existing theory and methods in
    posthuman media and/or communication practices.
  * The role of AI in shaping posthuman futures and subjectivities.
  * Posthuman approaches for the study of games, television, social
    media, journalism, and rhetoric.
  * The exploration of posthuman ethics in media studies.
  * Application of posthuman paradigms such as counter-actualization,
    modulation, and countermemory in media case studies.
  * Posthuman conceptualizations of media’s role in processes of
    subjectivation.
  * How media intra-actions emphasise different modes of materialism and
    materialities.
  * Experimental approaches to media studies.
  * Post-anthropocentric or non-human media studies.
  * Ontologies of posthuman media.
  * Posthumanist entanglements of media and culture.
  * Onto-epistemological postdualisms that could/should be applied to
    media studies.
We encourage submissions that draw broadly on the work of theorists such 
as N. Katherine Hayles, Rosi Braidotti, Karen Barad, Gilles Deleuze, and 
Michel Foucault, and that engage with the ethical, epistemological, and 
ontological aspects of posthumanism. We are particularly interested in 
papers that propose new methods of inquiry and analysis within media 
studies, and that engage with the potential of an affirmative posthuman 
turn within critical and cultural theory.
*Guest Editors:*
Dr. J.J. Sylvia IV, Associate Professor of Communications Media, 
Fitchburg State University
Dr. Poppy Wilde, Senior Lecturer in Media and Communication, Birmingham 
City University
*Submission Guidelines:*
Submissions should adhere to the/Journal of Posthumanism/guidelines for 
authors, which can be found 
here:https://journals.tplondon.com/jp/about/submissions 
<https://journals.tplondon.com/jp/about/submissions>. Please submit your 
abstract (max. 500 words), including a tentative title, and a short 
author biography (max. 100 words) via email 
(tojsylvia3 /at/ fitchburgstate.edu) 
<mailto:(jsylvia3 /at/ fitchburgstate.edu)>*and*(poppy.wilde /at/ bcu.ac.uk) 
<mailto:(poppy.wilde /at/ bcu.ac.uk)>by September 30, 2023, with the subject 
line “JoP - Posthumanism and Media Studies”.
*Review Process:*
All submitted abstracts will be initially reviewed by the guest editors 
to ensure relevance to the special issue theme. Authors of selected 
abstracts will be invited to submit full papers, which will then undergo 
a peer-review process in accordance with the journal’s standard review 
procedures.
*Important Dates:*
Abstract Submission Deadline: September 30, 2023
Notification of Abstract Acceptance: October 31, 2023
Full Paper for Peer Review (5,000-6,000 words, excluding footnotes and 
references) Deadline: March 10, 2024
Publication of the Special Issue: October, 2024
Please note: by submitting an abstract for this Special issue, you may 
also be asked to conduct peer review for an article within it (even if 
you are also accepted). If you would not like to be asked to conduct 
peer review, please indicate this in your email.
Please feel free to circulate this call for proposals among your 
colleagues and networks. If you have any questions about this call or 
the proposed special issue, please feel welcome to contact us. All 
inquiries and submissions can be sent to:(jsylvia3 /at/ fitchburgstate.edu) 
<mailto:(jsylvia3 /at/ fitchburgstate.edu)>*and*(poppy.wilde /at/ bcu.ac.uk) 
<mailto:(poppy.wilde /at/ bcu.ac.uk)>.
*References*
Aloi, G., & McHugh, S. (eds) (2021)./Posthumanism in art and science: A 
reader/. Columbia University Press.
Boyle, C. A. (2018)./Rhetoric as a posthuman practice/. The Ohio State 
University Press.
Cord, F. (2022). Posthumanist cultural studies: Taking the nonhuman 
seriously./Open Cultural Studies/,/6/(1), 
25-37.https://doi.org/10.1515/culture-2020-0138 
<https://doi.org/10.1515/culture-2020-0138>
Ferrando, F. (2020). Posthuman feminist ethics: Unveiling ontological 
radical healing. In M. R. Thomsen and Jacob Wamberg/The Bloomsbury 
handbook of posthumanism/, (pp. 141-60). Bloomsbury Academic.
Iliadis, A. (2013). Informational ontology: The meaning of Gilbert 
Simondon’s concept of individuation./Communication + 1, 2/(1). Article 
5.//https://doi.org/10.7275/R59884XW <https://doi.org/10.7275/R59884XW>
Monea, A., & Packer, J. (2016). Media genealogy and the politics of 
archaeology./International Journal of Communication,//10/, 3141–59.
Sylvia IV, J.J. (2019). From archaeology to genealogy: Adding processes 
of subjectivation to artistic intervention./Communication +1, 
7(2)./Article 3.https://doi.org/10.7275/a3dm-3770 
<https://doi.org/10.7275/a3dm-3770>
———. (2021). Posthuman media studies./Journal of Posthumanism,//1/(2), 
139-51.https://doi.org/10.33182/jp.v1i2.1360 
<https://doi.org/10.33182/jp.v1i2.1360>
Wilde, P. (2020). I, posthuman: A deliberately provocative 
title./International Review of Qualitative Research,//13/(3), 
365–80.https://doi.org/10.1177/1940844720939853. 
<https://www.zotero.org/google-docs/?SSBYIt>
———. (2022). Storytelling the multiple self: Posthuman autoethnography 
as critical praxis. In C. Blyth & T. K. Aslanian (Eds.),/Children and 
the power of stories/(pp. 1-16). Children: Global Posthumanist 
Perspectives and Materialist Theories. Springer 
Singapore.https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-9287-1_1 
<https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-9287-1_1>.
Wiley, S B. C., & Elam, J. (2018). Synthetic subjectivation: Technical 
media and the composition of posthuman subjects.”/Subjectivity,//11/(3), 
203–27.https://doi.org/10.1057/s41286-018-0055-0 
<https://doi.org/10.1057/s41286-018-0055-0>
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