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[ecrea] Call for Papers: The Rhetoric and Discourse of Oil (multimodal)
Fri Oct 02 08:42:40 GMT 2015
*Call for Papers for an edited collection: /The Rhetoric and
Discourse of Oil/*
*/
/*
Recent years have seen the rise of the Energy Humanities, which
consider cultures in terms of the energy sources that make them
possible, energy sources that tend to be invisible to those
inhabiting a given culture. In /Oil Culture/, for example, Ross
Barrett and Daniel Worden argue that in contemporary North America
oil is largely secreted out of sight but, at the same time, the oil
industry is as ubiquitous and necessary to contemporary life as
money (xix). Or, as Ruth Salvaggio puts it in her essay in that
collection, Even as we can smell the gas that we put into our cars,
or sometimes see the black substance that gets poured into car
engines or heating furnaces, oil itself remains a spectral
substanceuntil something ruptures and it all comes pouring out
(386). This simultaneous invisibility and necessity is effected
through rhetoric. For instance, in the recent Life Takes Energy
campaign, Enbridge presents various eventsbaking cupcakes,
colouring on a rainy day, swimming, swaddling a new babybefore
stating that the corporation provides the energy that makes these
moments possible. We dont see oil, or pipelines, or windmills in
these ads, but energys necessity is asserted and the energy
corporations necessity is implied.
Despite the rise of the Energy Humanities, eco-rhetoric, and
Petroculture, no study of oil rhetoric currently exists. Therefore,
/The Rhetoric and Discourse of Oil /seeks papers that examine how
discourse and rhetoric create/enable the spectrality of oil (how
rhetoric persuades individuals/the public that oil is an invisible
magic elixir fuelling progress) and how it also disrupts or counters
that view. Contributions to this collection will engage with our
understanding of petroleum in its fundamental ambiguity, not only as
a key sustaining source of modern culture but also as a toxic and
destructive commodity. As such, /The Rhetoric and Discourse of
Oil/ seeks interventions in the discourses and rhetorics of oil and
its related industries. Possible areas of focus include, but are not
limited to, rhetoric and/or discourse and one or more of the following:
bitumen extraction;
hydraulic fracturing (fracking);
Off-shore drilling;
Pipelines and other forms of transportation (oil-by-rail, the Lac
Mégantic disaster, tankers);
Spills, Leaks, Ruptures;
Upgrading and Refining;
Lawsuits (Aboriginal consultation, Treaty rights);
Politics;
Government documents;
Industry documents;
Advertising;
Film;
Poetry, fiction, drama;
Visual Rhetoric;
Photography/Petrography;
Environment vs. Economy;
Economic History.
Please submit proposals of 300-400 words to Jon Gordon
((jfg2 /at/ ualberta.ca) <mailto:(jfg2 /at/ ualberta.ca)>) and Heather Graves
((hgraves /at/ ualberta.ca) <mailto:(hgraves /at/ ualberta.ca)>) by Jan. 31, 2016.
Final papers will be due Sept. 1, 2016.
--
Dr. Jon Gordon
Instructor, Writing Studies
Office of Interdisciplinary Studies
University of Alberta
Edmonton, AB T6G 2E6
CANADA
E-mail: (jfg2 /at/ ualberta.ca) <mailto:(jfg2 /at/ ualberta.ca)>
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