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[ecrea] CFP Cultural Studies of Extraction
Fri Feb 06 22:18:42 GMT 2015
CALL FOR PAPERS
Cultural Studies of Extraction
A Special Issue for the journal Cultural Studies
Editors: Laura Junka-Aikio (University of Oulu, Finland) and Catalina
Cortes-Severino (Universidad Javeriana, Colombia)
The aim of this special issue of Cultural Studies is to encourage
cultural approaches to the study of the myriad of conflicts, struggles
and other phenomena that have risen in response to the ongoing
intensification and expansion of extractivist industries and forms of
exploitation. In addition to expanding the potential meanings of
extractivism, we seek to bring analytical attention on the variety of
popular responses that this extractive moment is generating globally.
In the narrow sense, extractivism refers to mass-scale industrial
extraction of natural resources but more recently, scholars have begun
to view extractivism in a much broader sense, as an ideological
construct and a paradigm of severe exploitation which is characteristic
of contemporary capitalism and neoliberalism at large, and which
permeates almost all aspects of the society. Likewise, whereas
extractivism has, in the past, been associated with colonial divisions
between the "core" and the "periphery", today its geographies are
increasingly complex: for instance the mining boom is currently dividing
communities and raising Indigenous resistance in Scandinavia, and in the
UK and the USA, it is white middle-class communities faced with
hydraulic fracturing that are now countering colonial extraction
policies literally underneath their own houses. Meanwhile in the Global
South, extractive industries and neoliberal land-based development
projects are provoking unseen levels
of forced displacement, environmental destruction, and social divisions
and disintegration - as well as courageous and complex resistance from
Indigenous, peasant and black communities that are most affected.
Its centrality to contemporary power notwithstanding, Cultural Studies
as a discipline has failed to engage this extractive moment actively. In
scholarly and public debates, extractivism is addressed predominantly
through economic, environmentalist and developmentalist discourses, and
hence its benefits and costs to the society are considered primarily in
relation to statistical and quantitative data.
By calling for cultural approaches to the study of extractivism and its
discontents, this special issue seeks to encourage broader exploration
of the multiple consequences, meanings, implications, affects,
everydayness and resistances that the current conjuncture of neoliberal
globalization, intensive exploitation and subjectivity might conceal,
and to support efforts to think past extractivism. How could Cultural
Studies as a political project help us understand the epistemologial,
ontological and political stakes of the extractive moment, and imagine
alternative futures? If extractivism is understood as a dominant
paradigm of exploitation rather than in reference to a limited set of
specific industries, what does it mean in different contexts, and what
are the sites through which it might be studied and examined? How are
contemporary extractivisms experienced, lived and resisted
transnationally and in particular locations, through the practices of
everyday life, through cu
ltural and social production, affects and through outright protests and
political struggles? In what ways is extractivism and resistance to it
reflected in popular culture and the arts? What does a Cultural Studies
of the extractive moment in world politics look like?
Suggested paper themes include, but are not restricted to:
- Colonialism, postcolonialism, and geographies of contemporary
extractivisms
- Extractivism as an ideology and a discursive formation
- Popular and cultural histories of extractivism
- Education and pedagogies of anti- or post-extractivism
- Extractivist exploitation and the mediations of class, gender,
ethnicity and race
- Artistic resistance and alliances against the extractive industries
- Other knowledges and alternatives to cultures of extraction
- Extractivism in urban spaces and cultures
- Branding extractivisms through popular culture
- Extractivism, gender and the politics of the body
- The cultural consequences of the extractive boom in particular
locations and/or regions
- Landscapes, soundscapes and other "scapes" of extraction
- Extractivism and time
- Extractivism, everyday life and subjectivities
- Alternative ecologies and culture-nature relationships
- Anti-extractivist resistances and neoliberalism
- Extractivism, translatability of local struggles, and transnational
resistance
- Academic extraction and appropriation of Indigenous, traditional and
other knowledges
In addition to academic articles (up to 9000 words), we welcome warmly a
range of other contributions, such as visual essays, book reviews and
reviews of artistic and other cultural productions that relate to the
topics of this issue.
Please send preliminary abstracts of approximately 500 words, together
with a short bio, to BOTH special issue editors by 13th April 2015. Also
all general inquiries regarding the special issue should be directed to
the issue editors at
corteseverino(at)gmail.com<mailto:(corteseverino /at/ gmail.com)> (Catalina
Cortes-Severino), and
laura.junka-aikio(at)oulu.fi<mailto:(laura.junka-aikio /at/ oulu.fi)> (Laura
Junka-Aikio). The submission deadline for the final article manuscripts
is 31 December 2015.
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