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[Commlist] Call for Papers - Reimagining Climate (Im)mobilities in the Panicocene

Fri Oct 04 10:57:59 GMT 2024





*Call for Papers*

*Reimagining Climate (Im)mobilities in the Panicocene
*
8-9 May 2025
Durham University

Keynote speakers
Professor Mimi Sheller, Worcester Polytechnic Institute (TBC)
Professor T.J. Demos, UC, Los Angeles (TBC)

Organizers
Professor Andrew Baldwin, Durham University
Dr. Elena Giacomelli, Marie-Curie Fellow, University of Bologna

Climate change and global mobility are two of the most defining – and borderless – challenges of our time. This conference offers a space to consider how visual aesthetics and narrative have been used to frame these challenges together and with what consequences. The conference is premised on the idea that while terms like ‘climate migration’, ‘climate refugee’, and ‘trapped’ and ‘immobile’ populations have been subject to relentless criticism over the last decade (Farbotko 2017; Bettini 2013; Felli, 2013; Baldwin, Frohlich, and Rothe 2019; Boas et al. 2019, 2022; Durand-Delacre et al. 2021), together these same notions  remain an enduring feature of the climate change political imaginary (Baldwin 2022).

One aspect of this imaginary, especially in Western media, concerns the way politicized migration narratives often mix with climate change to produce a discourse of threat. The result is that when climate change-induced migration is mediated, this is often in the language of insecurity rather than the reduction of social inequality or vulnerability. The “Panicocene” (Giacomelli 2023) refers to our current era, in which climate change and migration meet in a distorted narrative, an amplified emergency that foments anxiety and can lead to discrimination. Visual aesthetics—whether photography, visual arts, film, news and social media—and narrative continue to play a vital role in sustaining this imaginary by promoting such distorted narratives. The conference aims to expand our understanding of discourses on ‘climate change and human mobility’ by focussing squarely on how visual aesthetics have come to shape these discourses and why. A small body of work explored this question almost a decade ago (Methmann and Rothe, 2014; McKee 2011).

Our central concern is thus to reanimate the question of framing by exploring what a methodological focus on visual aesthetics and narratives adds to the already expansive critical debate around climate change and human mobility? How is the figure of the climate migrant/refugee depicted visually? What visual and narrative tropes can be observed in such depictions? Do such depictions function allegorically? If so, what can they tell us about the meaning of the climate crisis? Some of the other questions we hope to address include: How do visual and media narratives imagine linkages between climate change and human mobility? How do visual art and performance, film, photography, graphic novels and comics, differ in the way they portray images of migration from those depicted in mainstream media such as television, social networks, and newspapers? To what extent are migrants involved in the development of new forms of visual media and their intersection with climate and (im)mobilities? How might we understand the notion of ‘audience’ when considering climate change, human mobility and visual aesthetics? What kind of audience is assumed and/or produced by visual aesthetic practices that depict climate change and human mobility? And finally, what role could visual aesthetics play in re-narrating the relationship between climate change and human mobility beyond its conventional vocabularies of security, humanitarian crisis and liberal modes of adaptation?.

We invite academic contributions from across the interpretive social sciences and humanities, as well as from journalists, practitioners and artists operating in/through different visual narratives and media fields.

Call for Contributions

We welcome proposals for 15-minute papers. Please submit your abstract using this Google form. <https://forms.gle/uPo8kCqYHfWfshFQ9> The deadline to propose a paper is 1 January 2023. Notification of acceptance will be communicated by the end of February 2025. *No payment from the authors will be required.* Questions can be addressed to: (elena.giacomelli4 /at/ unibo.it)<mailto:(elena.giacomelli4 /at/ unibo.it)>; (w.a.baldwin /at/ durham.ac.uk)<mailto:(w.a.baldwin /at/ durham.ac.uk)>.

References
Baldwin, A. (2022). The Other of Climate Change: Racial Futurism, Migration, Humanism, London: Rowman and Littlefield. Baldwin, W. A., Fröhlich, C., & Rothe, D. (2019). From Climate Migration to Anthropocene Mobilities: Shifting the Debate; Editors introduction. Mobilities, 14(3): 289-297. Bettini G. (2013). Climate Barbarians at the Gate? A critique of apocalyptic narratives
on ‘climate refugees’. Geoforum, 45: 63-72.
Boas, I., Wiegel, H., Farbotko, C., Warner, J., & Sheller, M. (2022). Climate mobilities: migration, im/mobilities and mobility regimes in a changing climate. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 48(14): 3365–3379. Boas I., Farbotko C., Adams H., Sterly H., Bush S., van der Geest K., Wiegel H., Ashraf H., Baldwin A., Bettini G., Blondin S., de Bruijn M., Durand-Delacre D., Fröhlich C., Gioli G., Guaita L., Hut E., Jarawura F.X., Lamers M., Lietaer S., Nash S.L., Piguet E., Rothe D., Sakdapolrak P., Smith L., Tripathy Furlong B., Turhan E., Warner J., Zickgraf C., Black R., Hulme M. (2019). Climate migration myths. Nature climate change, 9(11): 901-903. Durand-Delacre D., Bettini G., Nash S.L., Sterly H., Gioli G., Hut E., Boas I., Farbotko C., Sakdapolrak P., de Bruijn M., Tripathy Furlong B., van der Geest K., Lietaer S., Hulme M. (2021). Climate Migration Is about People, Not Numbers, in Böhm S., Sullivan S. (eds.), Negotiating Climate Change in Crisis, Open Book Publishers, pp. 63-82. Farbotko, C. (2017). Representation and Misrepresentation of Climate Migrants. In Research Handbook on Climate Change, Migration and the law, edited by B. Mayer and F. Crépeau, 67–84. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar Publishing. Felli, R. (2013). Managing Climate Insecurity by Ensuring Continuous Capital Accumulation: ‘Climate Refugees’ and ‘Climate Migrants’. New Political Economy, 18 (3): 337–363. Giacomelli, E. (2023). Panicocene. Narrazioni su cambiamenti climatici, regimi di mobilità e migrazioni ambientali. Milano: FrancoAngeli. McKee, Y. (2011). On ‘Climate Refugees'”: Biopolitics, Aesthetics, and Critical Climate Change. Qui Parle, Spring, 19(2): 309-325. Methmann, Y. and Rothe D. (2014). Tracing the spectre that haunts Europe: the visual construction of climate-induced migration in the MENA region. Critical Security Studies, 2(2): 162-179.


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