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[ecrea] CFP: Histories of the Surveillance Society
Thu Oct 27 15:34:11 GMT 2016
*CALL FOR PAPERS
Histories of the Surveillance Society: Transnational Contexts
Edited by Robert Heynen and Emily van der Meulen*
A growing number of scholars have argued that today we live in a
‘surveillance society,’ suggesting that, especially with the spread of
digital technologies, surveillance and data collection have become
globally ubiquitous, driving everything from state security practices to
consumer culture. This is the context for the emergence of the field of
surveillance studies, which has expanded enormously over the past twenty
years. But how new is this surveillance society? What are its
dimensions, and how have they come into being internationally?
A small but expanding body of scholarship has traced important
histories, showing that many surveillance practices are not as novel as
sometimes thought. Indeed, important works have been published on
histories of medical surveillance (Cartwright 1995; Fairchild et al.
2007), surveillant criminology (Sekula 1986; Cole 2001; Finn 2009), and
the emergence of practices of identification (Torpey 2000; Caplan &
Torpey 2001; Groebner 2007; Bennett & Lyon 2008; About et al. 2013). We
have also seen an opening up of perspectives from outside the European
and Anglo-American worlds (Anderson 2004; McCoy 2009; Breckenridge
2014), and from Indigenous perspectives (K. Smith 2009).
This collection seeks to further broaden and deepen these emerging
historical perspectives, and to break new ground in thinking about how
histories of surveillance have shaped modern social systems over the
course of the 19th and 20th centuries. The approach of the volume is
global, incorporating transnational perspectives and work from the
global South. How has surveillance shaped the emergence of modern mass
industrial societies, capitalism, and colonialism? What role have new
media and information technologies played in this process? In what ways
are various people and populations differentially targeted by and
implicated in these surveillance practices?
We encourage submissions from scholars working in surveillance studies,
but also those outside the field seeking to rethink their work through
the lens of surveillance. We particularly encourage submissions that
draw on critical literature engaging with gender, race and
racialization, labour, disability, sexuality, and class.
Chapter topics may include, but are not limited to:
- The historical role of new media and information technologies (e.g.,
photography, film, databases) in the shaping of various global systems
of surveillance
- The role of both state and non-state forms of surveillance in
histories of intra- or transnational migration (e.g., identification
systems, border control mechanisms, status/non-status peoples)
- Histories of medical surveillance, including of specific diseases and
blood borne viruses (e.g., tuberculosis, sexually transmitted
infections), and the differential targeting of various bodies
- The constitution of disability through regimes of surveillance,
including eugenic identifications, interventions, and regulations
- Cultural representations and engagements with surveillance, including
but not limited to literature, film, visual art, and popular culture
- Capitalism, labour, and surveillance, in particular in relation to
accumulation by dispossession, poor and vagrancy laws, workers and
labour processes, and Marx’s and Marxist approaches
- State surveillance of political movements and dissidents (e.g., Red
scares and anti-Communism, COINTELPRO, suppression of national
liberation struggles, dirty wars in Latin America and elsewhere, dissent
in the Eastern Bloc, surveillance in authoritarian states)
- The production of gendered subjects and the elaboration of gender
binaries, including the policing and surveillance of queer, trans, and
gender non-conforming bodies
- Histories of criminology, including the development of policing,
growth of penal systems, and the extension of biometric practices (e.g.,
crainometry, physiognomy, fingerprinting)
- Surveillant strategies of colonial governance and the elaboration of
racialized hierarchies, including colonial policing and military, labour
exploitation, and settler practices
- Architecture, urban planning, and surveillance, in particular how
these are shaped by the specific power dynamics at play in different
global locations and historical periods
- Systems of identity and registration (e.g., the Koseki system in
Japan, pass laws in South Africa and elsewhere, criminal registries of
specific populations)
- Resistance, resilience, and responses to the various practices of
surveillance outlined above, including how forms of counter-surveillance
or sousveillance have been used in emancipatory social and political
projects, and the role of surveillance in radical and revolutionary
movements
*Abstract submission:*
Interested contributors should send a 300-400 word abstract and 100 word
bio by November 10, 2016 to (Histories.Surveillance /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(Histories.Surveillance /at/ gmail.com)>. Notification of abstract
acceptance will be December 15, 2016, and completed 6,000-8,000 word
chapter drafts will be due by July 1, 2017.
*Book editors:*
Robert Heynen is an Assistant Professor in the Department of
Communication Studies at York University, Canada. He is co-editor of
'Expanding the Gaze: Gender and the Politics of Surveillance'
(University of Toronto Press, 2016) and author of 'Degeneration and
Revolution: Radical Cultural Politics and the Body in Weimar Germany'
(Brill, 2015).
Emily van der Meulen is an Associate Professor in the Department of
Criminology at Ryerson University, Canada. She is co-editor of
'Expanding the Gaze: Gender and the Politics of Surveillance'
(University of Toronto Press, 2016) and 'Selling Sex: Experience,
Advocacy, and Research on Sex Work in Canada' (University of British
Columbia Press, 2013).
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