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[Commlist] CFP: Counter-Hegemonic Epistemologies as Innovation and/or Contestation
Mon Jan 14 19:14:29 GMT 2019
This is a call for contributions to 4S Open Panel No. 28:
Counter-Hegemonic Epistemologies as Innovation and/or Contestation
<https://www.4s2019.org/accepted-open-panels/>. The official call can be
found below. This open panel could include papers on a myriad of
subjects having to do with different systems of knowledge coming up
against one another, such as the following:
- Silences, Imaginaries, Ethics, and Mistrust: Identifying and
Interacting with Suspicious Researchers in Archives
- Pharmacological Self-Experimentation: How do techniques of
self-quantification shape popular discourses of wellness?
- Indigenous knowledge systems and their relationship to Museums'
institutionalized forms of coloniality
- Looking to Black Mountain College for pedagogical innovation in
arts education
- Ghost hunting: pseudoscientific methods in the post-truth era
*Submissions are due on February 1, 2019.*
Please contact the organizers Yvonne Eadon (UCLA), (ymeadon /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(ymeadon /at/ gmail.com)>; and James Hodges (Rutgers)
(James.hodges /at/ rutgers.edu) <mailto:(James.hodges /at/ rutgers.edu)> with any
questions. Full CFP text below:
"Resistance to dominant modes of thinking, knowing, and doing can
take a variety of forms– and often results in the production of new
epistemological communities of practice. The counter-hegemonic
epistemologies of conspiracy theorists, self-experimenters, citizen
scientists, marginalized and oppressed communities, and members of
many other knowledge domains frequently embody narratives and ways
of knowing that run against the dominant paradigms of their social
and historical contexts. Thomas Kuhn’s work on paradigm shifts is
just one example of the turmoil around shifts in dominant scientific
epistemology. In many cases, critical or disruptive epistemologies
are met by those in power with skepticism and even fear.
This open panel calls for case studies addressing counter-hegemonic
epistemologies in the fields of history of science and technology,
as well as STS, information studies, education, media studies, and
other relevant disciplines. We are particularly interested in
research that brings a comparative historical perspective to bear on
the continuously contested nature of dominant knowledge systems.
Some points to consider could be: how have specific
counter-narratives affected the dominant discourses in the fields
that they challenge? Alternatively, how do dominant discourses
overpower counter-hegemonic epistemologies? What kinds of contexts
does this happen in, and what are the social, political, and
historical implications of such contestation? We welcome submissions
that address communities including but not limited to alternative
education, decolonial science and technology, clandestine chemistry,
whistleblowing, harm reduction, and radical politics. By bringing
such disparate ways of knowing into contact, our panel aims to build
towards a robust account of the innovation and contestation that
prevail among counter-hegemonic epistemological communities."
If you would like to submit, please visit the 4S website and upload your
250-word abstract to 4S Open Panel No. 28: Counter-Hegemonic
Epistemologies asInnovation and/or Contestation
<https://www.4s2019.org/accepted-open-panels/>. The deadline is February
1, 2019. We look forward to your contributions!
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