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[ecrea] CFA Zapruder World - Performing Race
Tue Feb 14 11:42:03 GMT 2017
*Call for Articles: Performing Race*
A special issue of /Zapruder World: Transnational Journal for the
History of Social Conflicts/ edited by Irene Fattacciu and Claudio Fogu
ZapruderWorld is an online, open-access and peer-reviewed history
journal coordinated by an international network of activists and
scholars, both academic and independent. The journal’s parent
organization, Storie in movimento (SIM), has been active since 2002 and
continues to publish the Italian journal Zapruder.
The aim of Zapruder World is to create a wide arena in which to exchange
critical knowledge based on both individual research and collective
elaboration. The journal focuses on social conflict paying particular
attention to conflicts as movements rather than focusing on their
resolutions, so as to better connect the history of social conflicts
with current transnational cycles of protest. Zapruder World is animated
by an aspiration towards “global history” but intentionally leaves its
actual definition, contents, and methods open for discussion.
Seeking to stake a position that does not fall into the definitional
trap of considering “race” as a biological fact or as a social
construction, the fourth issue of Zapruder World wants to explore the
practices through which “race” acquires importance as performance and
experience, by focusing on everyday life. Race is indeed not always
important /per se/, but it becomes important through a series of
specific practices that influence the way people behave, identify, and
reproduce themselves. Racism permeates everyday life in ways often not
obvious, affecting the ways in which people relate and look at the
world, as well as their aspirations and their sense of identity. And,
today, the social construction of “race” is consistently challenged in
politics and popular culture by developments in genetic science as well
as by public policies that pretend to measure race and establish
categories to implement affirmative policies. Critical Race Theory
studies and those of connected fields (LatCrit, Feminist and Queer
studies) have brought an essential contribution to a new understanding
of race by looking at race as a performative identity, shifting the
focus from macro-institutions to the mechanisms of formation of racial
identities, still keeping the implicit political dimension of the
operation. Yet the idea that racial categorization are primarily the
product of historically determined social and cultural practices needs
to be further investigated and substantiated. How do the creation and
reproduction of racialized discourse interact with the practices that
implicitly underpin it? How does the process of construction of ‘race’
as performative identity take place through experiences and practices?
Which are the appropriate analytical tools to explore the spaces where
race was and is negotiated and socialized? How did the tensions occurred
at different times/places between racialized institutional practices and
patterns of resistance substantiated in forms of struggle against
dominant conceptions of race?
In order to answer these questions, this issue aims to explore the
ordinariness of race shaping the world around us through the set of
environments, practices and relations within which we daily spend most
of our time, and where the ways through which one is ‘raced' (as well as
gendered, classed and so on) are not necessarily explicit or
understood.We invite contributions focusing on any area of the World
since the 17^th century, and that especially address one or more of the
following fields:
·Consumer culture and consuming practices
·Racialized subjectivities, identities and performances
·Racial socialization (family, school ecc.)
·Racism and strategies of resistance in the workplace
·Marriage, love and sex
·The construction of racial identity through the experience of parenthood
·Body and racialized aesthetics
Although history is the main focus of this journal, multi- and
interdisciplinary approaches, as well as contributions merging an
historical perspective with other disciplines are highly appreciated.
Intersectional approaches focusing on the intersections between race and
gender as well as class are also particularly welcomed.
We also invite submission of non-essay form original work such
photographs, videos, interviews, drawings, comics, songs, hyperlinks to
online resources, multimedia, etc… both accompanying the articles
themselves and as autonomous contributions. We encourage authors to
think about incorporating multimedia both into their pieces proposed for
Zapruder World and in the sections (e.g. “yesterday” and “today”) we
have created on our website.
/
/
/Submissions:/Abstracts in English (300-600 words) shall be sent by
February 20 to (info /at/ zapruderworld.org)
All contributors will be informed about the status of their abstract
submission by March 15, 2016. Full articles (preferably 6,000-9,000
words) are expected by May 30, 2017.
The Manifesto of Zapruder World, the journal’s previous volumes, as well
as guidelines for prospective authors can be found at:
http://www.zapruderworld.org <http://www.zapruderworld.org/>.
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