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[Commlist] CfP: Psychoanalysis, Sexualities and Networked Media
Tue Jul 09 13:05:24 GMT 2019
*Psychoanalysis, Sexualities and Networked Media*
*Psychoanalysis, Culture & Society *special issue
**
Edited by Jacob Johanssen (St. Mary’s University,
(jacob.johanssen /at/ stmarys.ac.uk) <mailto:(jacob.johanssen /at/ stmarys.ac.uk)>*)*
**
*Call for papers*
For psychoanalysis, sexuality, how it is both individually thought about
and lived and how it is culturally constructed, is key to understanding
both the human psyche and social change. Freud believed that the sexual
behaviour of an individual, from the earliest stages of development
onwards, provided key insights into how they related to others and
themselves in life more generally. While Freud stressed that there is no
‘normal’ sexuality and heterosexuality was a myth, his particular
theories of female sexuality were nonetheless critiqued by feminist
thinkers. Initially for Freud, the symptom itself was a distorted or
covered manifestation of sexual activity which related to conflicts.
Those ideas were developed by post-Freudian psychoanalysts in numerous
ways. It is psychoanalysis that fundamentally contributed to the
theorisation and understanding of the role that sexual desires and
fantasies play in our (un)conscious forms of relating to ourselves and
others. While psychoanalytic schools have come to understand sexuality
in different ways, other disciplines such as queer theory, cultural
studies and philosophy have grappled with and drawn on those
conceptualisations of sexuality. Particular notions that are often taken
for granted in every day discourse – perversion, fetishism, voyeurism –
were (and are) developed by psychoanalysts. The call for papers for a
special issue of Psychoanalysis, Culture and Society takes
psychoanalytic theories of sexuality / sexualities and how they were
adapted/critiqued by other disciplines as a starting point for analysing
contemporary networked media, online spaces and digital phenomena.
In the past two decades, the Internet and networked devices have not
only transformed societies but also human agency and subjectivity. How
we communicate and relate to others has been shaped by our engagement
with and immersion in digital media, devices and platforms. Social media
in particular can be seen as enablers of unprecedented levels of human
communication and cooperation which result in a sense of recognition and
security for individuals, at the same time users have become data points
which are commodified, surveyed and tracked by companies, governments
and other entities. Contemporary online communication is also often
marked by strong levels of hatred, aggression and polarisation which are
characterised by the symbolic, and sometimes physical, destruction of
the other. This proposed special issue of Psychoanalysis, Culture and
Society places a specific focus on sexualities in contemporary online
spaces. Sexualities have become more flexible and fluid thanks to
technology as they are facilitated through hook up apps like Tinder, or
Grindr. In reproductive terms, devices connected to the Internet such as
fertility and health check apps have also become available. The Internet
facilitates an informative and pleasurable engagement with sexualities,
be it through online content, or communities around sexual identities
for example. Subjects reveal aspects about their sexualities online more
than ever before. At the same time, much of mainstream pornography has
been critiqued as depicting women as oppressed, sexualised objects aimed
to satisfy a male gaze. Clinicians have also noted that pornography can
impact young people’s sexual development in harmful ways. Perhaps
somewhat related to the widespread engagement with some forms of
pornography, women are discussed in certain online spaces (such as
forums on Reddit or 4chan) in highly misogynistic terms. Such language
is often inspired by right-wing discourse and imagery which has gained
increasing visibility online. The #MeToo movement on the other hand has
made use of social media for activist purposes in order to resist and
expose the widespread sexual assault and harassment conducted by men. It
has attracted criticism for some of the methods and narratives deployed
which have led to false accusations for example.
It is safe to say that the representation of and engagement with
sexualities has exploded due to digital technologies. There is scope to
interpret such aspects in depth through psychoanalysis in combination
with other approaches.
Possible topics include but are not limited to:
- Psychoanalytic approaches to sexuality
- Psychoanalysis and other conceptualisations of sexuality (e.g.
Foucauldian, Deleuze-Guattarian, queer theoretical)
- Clinical perspectives on sexuality and digital media
- Repression and its status today
- Pleasures, unpleasures – Eros and the death drive
- #MeToo and activism against sexualised violence
- The Alt-Right and online misogyny
- Online pornography
- Livestreaming and camming
- Hook-up apps
- The Internet of Things (fertility devices, sex toys, sex robots, etc.)
- Social media
- Games and gaming cultures
- Virtual reality and forms of simulation
Please send abstracts of no longer than 500 words to Jacob Johanssen
((jacob.johanssen /at/ stmarys.ac.uk) <mailto:(jacob.johanssen /at/ stmarys.ac.uk)>)
by 09 September 2019. Accepted full papers will be due in February 2020.
The special issue will be published in December 2020.
Article length: 6-8,000 words
**
**
*About the journal*
/Psychoanalysis, Culture and Society/is an international, peer-reviewed
journal published by Palgrave
(https://www.palgrave.com/gb/journal/41282). It explores the
intersection between psychoanalysis and the social world. It is a
journal of both clinical and academic relevance which publishes articles
examining the roles that psychoanalysis can play in promoting and
achieving progressive social change and social justice.
Psychoanalysis, Culture & Society benefits a worldwide community of
psychoanalytically informed scholars in the social and political
sciences, media, cultural and literary studies, as well as clinicians
and practitioners who probe the relationship between the social and the
psychic. It is the official journal of the Association for the
Psychoanalysis of Culture & Society.
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