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[ecrea] CFA Diffractions - Graduate Journal for the Study of Culture: "(Un-)Boundedness: On Mobility and Belonging"
Tue Sep 24 09:17:11 GMT 2013
Call for Articles
Diffractions - Graduate Journal for the Study of Culture
(Un-)Boundedness: On Mobility and Belonging
Deadline for submissions: November 15 2013
In a “liquid modernity”, to use Zygmunt Bauman’s terminology, everything
is more fluid and flexible, “neither fix[ing] space nor bind[ing] time”
(Bauman, 2000: 2). Whereas in the past, one could find deeply rooted
social organizations and solid cultural configurations, in modern times,
people and institutions have become increasingly deterritorialized. The
fact that no one nor anything remains the same or in the same place for
too long has had an enormous impact on how identities and communities
are shaped, perceived and performed. They are no longer marked by
permanence and stability but by mobility, change and imagination.
Time and space compression (Harvey, 1989) brought by late modernity as a
result of new technologies, new means of transportation and new
communication tools has played an important role in the devaluation of
spatial delimitation, by nurturing a faster and continuous circulation
of goods, ideas, information and people at a large scale. Traditional
notions of home, homeland and nation have been destabilized by new
cultural flows that challenge the symbolic boundaries of both domestic
space and nation-state. In Manuel Castells’ terms, the “space of flows”
keeps on replacing the old “space of places” (Castells, 2001), where
“new strategies of flexible accumulation have promoted a flexible
attitude toward citizenship” (Ong, 1999), “floating identities” (Abbas,
1997) and “diasporic public spheres” (Shih, 2007). The emergence of this
new “mobility paradigm” (Urry 2002, 2007) has certainly involved the
creation of new experiences, the production of new layers of personal
and social relations and the formation of new geographies. As claimed by
Elliot and Urry, “changes in how people live their life today are both
affected by and reflect the broader changes of global mobility
processes” (2007: ix), with connectivity being exponentially dependent
on “miniaturized mobilities” (ibid.) and lifestyles becoming
increasingly nomadic. All these aspects are summoned up in the main
argument proposed by the authors that people’s lives have become,
indeed, mobile lives (ibid.).
Mobility is often depicted as the opposite of belonging. Yet, these
constantly shifting spaces and relationships, these global cultural
flows or interactions Arjun Appadurai calls –scapes (ethnoscapes,
technoscapes, financescapes, mediascapes, and ideoscapes) (Appadurai,
1996), whilst pointing to a growing sense of heterogeneity and
transiency, also promote cultural exchange and new scales of belonging.
Indeed, people appear to be always in transit especially through
“non-places”, “space[s] which cannot be defined as relational, or
historical, or concerned with identity” (Augé, 1995: 77-78), yet, at the
same time, foster a situational and transitory feeling of belonging.
Nevertheless, this rising globalized circulation does not necessarily
imply the standardization of the social fabric. In fact, this mobility
is taking place unevenly, at different paces and intensities, bringing
visibility to globalization as a complex and multiform process, as the
motor of both similarity and difference, dialogue and conflict,
proximity and distance, boundedness and unboundedness. On the one hand,
access to other cultures becomes easier and migratory movements
increasingly more frequent, thus contributing to a regular contact with
what is deemed different and unfamiliar. However, on the other hand, it
is often the case that mobility, “frequent repotting” (Putnam, 2000:
204), displacement and uprootedness lead to disparity, exclusion, and to
the creation of hybridized (Bhabha, 1994; Canclini 1995) or liminal
(Turner, 1967; 1969) forms of life. This tense relationship between two
or more different cultures contributes to the development of hybrid or
borderland identities built upon both negotiation and transgression yet
allowing the invention of new subjectivities, cartographies and
categories of difference and belonging.
Themes to be addressed by contributors may include but are not
restricted to the following:
• Mobility and (Be)Longing: Migration, Diaspora, Exile and Homecomings
• Memory and (Up)Rootedness
• Cosmopolitanism, Hospitality and Global Citizenship
• Sovereignty and Nationalism
• Transnational Imagination and Cultural Transfers
• Liminality, Hibridity and Identity
• Peripheries, Remappings and Contested Cartographies
• Modern Cities and Urban Imaginaries
• Travel, Tourism and Mobile Lifestyles
• Artistic, Literary and Media Representations of Mobility and Belonging
• Scale, Geocriticism and World Literature
• Translation, Globalization and Alterity
• Digital Mobility, Communities and (Un)Connectedness
• (Im)Materiality and Belonging
We look forward to receiving articles of no more than 20 A4 pages (not
including bibliography) and a short bio of about 150 words by November
15, 2013 at the following address: (submissions /at/ diffractions.net).
DIFFRACTIONS also accepts book reviews that may not be related to the
issue’s topic. If you wish to write a book review, please contact us at
(reviews /at/ diffractions.net).
Please submit your contributions according to the journal's guidelines.
Find us at www.diffractions.net.
Diffractions - Graduate Journal for the Study of Culture
Catholic University of Portugal | Research Center for Communication and
Culture
Palma de Cima | 1649-023 | Lisbon| Portugal
E-mail: (info /at/ diffractions.net) Follow us on facebook.com/diffractionsjournal
Sónia Pereira
....................................................................
Assessoria Científica do Centro de Estudos de Comunicação e Cultura
Faculdade de Ciências Humanas
Universidade Católica Portuguesa
Palma de Cima
1649-023 Lisboa
Tel.: (+351) 217 214 018, ext. 3143
E-mail: (sonia.pereira /at/ fch.lisboa.ucp.pt)
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