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[Commlist] Call For Papers: 'Faking It?: Conceptualising 'Fake' in Culture, Society and Academia'
Mon Dec 17 18:05:12 GMT 2018
EXCURSIONS JOURNAL 9:1
Call for Papers and Abstracts: ‘FAKE’
Deadline for Conference Abstracts: 15 February 2019
Deadline for Journal Articles: 1 April 2019
“Faking it” Conference: 11-12 June 2019
“In a world that really has been turned on its head, truth is a moment
of falsehood.” -Guy Debord, La Société du spectacle
“Georgio Peviani is doing everything that a successful fashion designer
needs to do, apart from existing.“ -Oobah Butler, Vice
In the era of ‘Post-truth’, where “a few claims on Twitter can have the
same credibility as a library full of research” (Coughlan 2017), the
distinctions between the original and the inauthentic, the actual and
the seeming or the experienced and the imagined are becoming less and
less distinguishable. Fake has become an omnipresent feature of both our
daily lives and a globalized, ultra-connected culture: it is in the way
we dwell and break free from spaces and ideas.
While fake news and the fabricated – often targeted – versions of truth
are not a new thing, the notion of ‘fake’ has been much publicized in
the aftermath of Donald Trump’s election alongside a variety of
anti-democratic populist governments around the world. This has
revitalised critical debates in the long history of examining,
documenting, and contextualizing the proliferation of false news and
pseudo-events (Flynn et al 2017; Kent et al 2006; Boorstin 1971). The
transmission of “information of questionable integrity and value”
(Reilly 2018: 139) is the new norm of shaping public opinion and
therefore the public Are we now condemned to appreciate and prefer “the
sign to the thing signified, the copy to the original, representation to
reality, appearance to essence”? (Feuerbach, quoted in Debord 1994) or
has the ‘fake’ – the unreal, the counterfeit or the inauthentic – been
revealed as an ever-present intrinsic part of our lives and social
relationships? Has the ‘truth’ always been solely a matter of discourse,
and ‘fake’, ‘fake news’ a rhetorical strategy: a floating signifier
(Farkas & Schou, 2018)?
In order to answer these questions, we need to comprehend various
manifestations of ‘fake’ in our social reality and the individual
aspects of our everyday discourses and practices. This year’s Excursions
Committee aims to gather contributions that identify, research and
reflect upon these manifestations, while resonating with the fields of
cultural, urban, gender, activist and media studies. Furthermore, to
provide a conceptual description of the term, we interpret fake as:
artificial, assumed (not true or real; deliberately fabricated or
imitated), contrived (having an unnatural or false appearance or
quality), factitious (formed by or adapted to an artificial or
conventional standard), false (not genuine; intentionally untrue;
adjusted or made so as to deceive – deception tool) and pseudo (fake;
being apparently rather than actually as stated). We also want to
consider what “realness” narratives prioritise and what they
marginalise, particularly reflecting on the notion of “real” womanhood
in recent debates that seek to expose and exclude trans and gender
nonconforming people from certain spaces and communities.
SUBMISSION FOR THE JOURNAL:
We are seeking journal submissions on the topic of “fake” for this
year’s Excursions journal, a University of Sussex, doctoral-led academic
journal. The deadline for journal submissions is 1 April 2019. Scholarly
papers should be between 3,000 and 5,000 words and must follow Harvard
style guidelines. We also encourage creative submissions in media such
as film, photography, or audio. For creative submissions, please include
an abstract and a brief biography (no more than 150 words) along with
your submission. To submit your work, you will need to register with us
on our website http://www.excursions-journal.org.uk. Once you are
registered you can submit your paper by clicking on 'My Journals' and
then selecting the link 'Submission', which will then lead you through
the process. All enquiries should be directed to
(enquiries /at/ excursions-journal.org.uk).
SUBMISSION FOR THE CONFERENCE:
Excursions Journal are also seeking abstracts of 250 – 300 words for a
conference due to take place at the University of Sussex on 11-12 June
2019. True to its main theme, this conference seeks to address the
superficiality or ‘fakeness’ of academic conventions. We are interested
in challenging and deconstructing entrepreneurship and professionalism
of academic work and publications. Hence, the conference will be divided
into two parts: (1) classic chaired panels, (2) followed by a workshop
during which each of the papers will be discussed using a live
peer-review method. The workshop aims to showcase academic rigour and
hidden labour behind academic publications rather than criticize
particular papers. We plan for the final publication to take the form of
a work-in-progress discussion on the conceptualization of fake in
culture. We are interested in receiving submissions from a range of
disciplines: social sciences, cultural studies, life science and others.
We particularly seek proposals by people who are disadvantaged or
under-represented in their communities or have experienced oppression of
any kind. The subject of your abstract could include but is not limited to:
- Fake feminism/gender? – post-feminism, carceral feminism,
trans-exclusionary radical feminism, neoliberal feminism, nationalist
feminism, white feminism, imperial feminism
- Fake oppression(s)? – debates on identity politics, political
correctness, free speech, safe spaces, reverse racism, #gamergate,
incels, alt-right, post-racism/post-race, fake history
- Fake media? – yellow journalism, fake news, elite-funded media
outlets, professionalised journalism vs. citizen journalism, fake art
- Fake activism/social movements? – clicktivism, slacktivism, pop/trendy
activism, clique activism, neoliberal social movements, NGOisation,
corporate funding
- Fake cities? – gentrification, ‘consumptionscapes’, Commodification &
privatisation of public space, tourist gaze, Air BnB and renter society,
‘creative class’, ‘staged authenticity ’, projection of
diversity/liberalism (e.g. Amsterdam)
PROPOSAL GUIDELINES, DEADLINES AND GRANTS:
The deadline for abstract submissions for the conference is 15 February
2019, abstracts should be between 250 – 300 words, and include a short
author bio (no more than 50 words). Please submit via the Google Form
https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1vTSpDj1U4LTwasqbBeCkJlSN5RfWFoLx-PLqFsmU7m4/
Alternatively, if you are having difficulties with the form, please
email your abstract to our enquiries email address below. Applicants
will be notified of acceptance by the end of March.
Please note, there will be no cost to attend or present at this
conference and refreshments will be provided. Please ensure any dietary
or accessibility requirements are outlined when registering for the event.
Applicants will also be asked to provide a full version of their papers
by the 20 May 2019, by emailing them to
(enquiries /at/ excursions-journal.org.uk). The papers will be shared with the
rest of the panel and made available to attendees to give people enough
time to read some/all of them if they wish.
We are delighted to offer a number of small grants to people who would
have difficulty presenting, or performing the work upon which their
presentations are based, without material assistance or travel costs.
Please mention if you would like to apply for this grant in your
application. We particularly welcome applications for these from people
of colour; people from Indigenous backgrounds; women and those whose
gender identities do not conform to hegemonic gendered norms; people
from poor and working-class backgrounds; and disabled people.
For questions about any of the above, please email
(enquiries /at/ excursions-journal.org.uk) or contact us on Twitter (@Excursions_J)
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