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[Commlist] Call for Abstracts: Pharmacologies of Media (Reminder)
Thu Mar 04 11:34:09 GMT 2021
Call for Abstracts: Pharmacologies of Media (Reminder)
"We invite 300 word abstracts for a forthcoming special issue of /Media
Theory/ exploring “pharmacologies of media.”//
/Media Theory <http://mediatheoryjournal.org/about/>/ is an independent,
online and open access journal of peer-reviewed, theoretical
interventions into all aspects of media and communications. There are
_no_ article processing charges
<http://mediatheoryjournal.org/editorial-policies/publication-charges/>
for authors.
//
/Are media doing us more harm than good?/ This question has shadowed
accounts of new technologies for millennia, from the advent of writing
right through to the emergence of social media. Beginning with Plato’s
reflections on writing’s effects on memory, and under the influence of
work by philosophers like Jacques Derrida (1981) and Bernard Stiegler
(2011), media scholars often explore this question using the concept of
the /pharmakon/.
In its Platonic sense, the /pharmakon/ is both a remedy and a poison, or
something that can both heal and harm. To describe media as
/pharmacological/ is to acknowledge that they can have both positive and
negative effects. But this concept is difficult to disentangle from its
medical origins. The /pharmakon/ is a substance, a drug or a medicine,
that might be intoxicating or beneficial. Like drugs, this double
capacity is not inherently value-laden, or good and/or bad, but is a
function of how the media operate. Like drugs, this capacity informs how
media operate on, extend, or curtail our capacity to sense, think, or
act. But here the analogy falls apart. Media and drugs address different
domains of the body and have distinct cultures. If this analogy can only
stretch so far, what are we to make of the concept of the /pharmakon/ today?
In this special issue, we want to revisit this concept in order to trace
its histories and to test its utility for contemporary media studies.
Alongside exploring the moral and embodied genealogies of the
/pharmakon/, we also want to trace a third: whether and how the
concept’s double capacity works at the level of materiality. The
/pharmakon/ provides us with a conceptual means of apprehending how
media are entangled with and shaped by the political, economic, and
ecological distribution of matter. If the material dimension of media is
conjoined with a politics of material harm/cure, our proposition is that
the concept of the /pharmakon/ could be developed into a rich resource
for thinking not only of the social impact of contemporary media, but
the distributed, material reality in which they’re enrolled.
**
We use the term /pharmacologies of media/ to mark our interest in media
in the present, where ‘media’ is understood in an expanded sense, across
domains, and at many different scales, and in the role that this
concept--and its cognates--have played in the study of media past and
present. By examining the limits of the concepts of pharmakon and media,
this issue seeks to expand and transform discussions of race, toxicity,
body, mediation, affordance, in areas such as science and technology
studies, feminist and queer theory, biopolitics and the body, media
archaeology and theory, visual studies, environmental and medical
humanities.**
**
The biopolitical role that media play in governing the circulation of
resources establishes relations of power that the /pharmakon/ can help
us to identify and to critique. Media’s large-scale role as essential
infrastructures establishes /pharmacological/ relations between the
consumption of new technology, the waste produced by its dynamics of
obsolescence, and the sometimes-violent processes of extraction that
underlie the production of technology, as we see with minerals like
Coltan or Lithium. The large-scale and, crucially, deep-time effect of
technological progress on the Earth’s dwindling range of species has a
pharmacological dimension. So, too, does the body’s material-chemical
relationship to particular atoms or molecules used in the production of
media, or - as with testosterone, for instance (Preciado, 2013) - as
specific techniques of individuation. The /pharmakon/ not only helps us
to underscore the reality of these relations; crucially, it also focuses
our analyses of media on the actual processes and operations that media
technologies or cultural techniques enact.
We envisage that this issue will be divided into two main parts: one
dedicated to reflecting on the conceptual history of the pharmakon and
assessing its relevance to the study of media, and a second that
exploring what might pharmacology of media’s /material/ dimensions look
like.
Could the /pharmakon/ inform methods and theories for engaging with
material media processes? What are its histories and inheritances? How
has it informed our conceptions and critiques of media? Does it need
repurposing for the twenty-first century, and if so, how? Most
crucially, what does pharmacological critique look like today, in practice?
We are interested in submissions that address this concept in any way
related to media/theory. We are particularly interested in the way that
the concept of the /pharmakon/ might intersect with race and/or
ethnicity, and would encourage submissions that explore the interfaces
between this concept and racialisation in the context of data
collection, tracking, personalisation, and discrimination.
*Suggested topics might include (but are not limited to):*
Conceptual histories of the /pharmakon/, existing or possible
Pharmacological conception of race and ethnicity
Embodied pharmacologies: medicine, drugs, toxicity
Pharmacologies of substances: plastics, minerals, chemicals across scales
Hormones and technologies of gender
Pharmacology and individual/collective individuation
Viral pharmacologies: quarantine, lockdown, masking, distancing
Pharmacologies of extraction, infrastructure, logistics, trade
Petrochemicals and media culture
Pharmacology and postcoloniality
Pharmacology and genetics
Body, milieu, techniques
McLuhan’s “extensions” in the 21st Century
Mediated feeling, extended sensing, and perception-at-a-distance**
*The timeline for submissions is as follows:*
Abstracts due *March 08, 2021*
Notification of acceptance by *March 22, 2021*
Full papers due for peer-review: *August 01, 2021*
Decisions and peer-review feedback: *November 01, 2021*
**Revised articles due: *January 15, 2022*
Projected special issue publication date: *mid-2022*
*Please send abstracts - or any queries - to Yiğit
Soncul*((y.soncul /at/ lcc.arts.ac.uk) <mailto:(y.soncul /at/ lcc.arts.ac.uk)>)*and*
*Scott Wark* ((s.wark /at/ warwick.ac.uk) <mailto:(s.wark /at/ warwick.ac.uk)>) *by
March 08, 2021*"
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