[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[Commlist] Call For Papers: SAGE Special Issue with Earth in focus
Tue May 04 15:10:28 GMT 2021
*Themed Issue of /International Journal of Cultural Studies/*
*On Mediations and the Environment: Earth in Focus***
Guest-editor: Miyase Christensen, Department of Media Studies, Stockholm
University; the Department of Philosophy and History, KTH Royal
Institute of Technology, SWEDEN
(miyase.christensen /at/ ims.su.se) <mailto:(miyase.christensen /at/ ims.su.se)>
(miyachristensen /at/ yahoo.com) <mailto:(miyachristensen /at/ yahoo.com)>
Over the past decade, themes and paradigms that incorporate an
‘environment lens’ have gained prominence in a wide range of research
areas in the broad realm of cultural studies. The increased visibility
of pressing questions such as environmental justice provided a positive
push for historically more western-centric and positivistic disciplines
in social sciences and humanities to pay greater attention to overlooked
localities and epistemologies. Yet, the level of increase in the urgency
of the need for social transformation in particular areas such as
climate change or marine pollution is not matched with the level of
expansion of disciplinary and geographic cross-breeding and
transformative thinking in environmental sciences and environmental
humanities. Academic knowledge and publications produced in humanities
and social sciences, including media and communication studies, still
remain, for the large part, western-centric and display a limited degree
of inter-, multi-, or trans-disciplinarity—notable exceptions and
aspirations not-withstanding. Disciplinary and geographic provincialism
continue to play a significant role in shaping research agendas as well
as policymaking, despite the existence of different vulnerabilities. It
is fair to suggest that despite the increased visibility of
environmental themes and formerly absent regions and locales in
scholarly research, visual and textual analyses as well as narratives
that originate /from /such localities themselves or attention to forms
of ‘slow violence’ (Nixon, 2011), rather than to disaster news or
sensational scenarios, remain limited.
The purpose of this themed issue is to explore a variety of themes,
topics and visions in the study of the environment in cultural studies
in general, and media and communication studies in particular.Studies of
environmental narratives in some fields such as literature and film
studies —ecocriticism, by way of an example, is an inherently
interdisciplinary field— , philosophy, and history have displayed
ingenuity and awareness of geographic diversity, there is room and need
for greater spill over to disciplines such as media and communication
studies where analyses of environmental news and electronic content have
reigned supreme. One starting point for this themed issue is the idea
that environmental narratives are incessantly and precipitously
transformed as they traverse diverse mediums/media and scales. At a time
when our mediation and communication channels (from literature, film,
legacy media, social media platforms to museum exhibitions, visual and
audio-art installations) are unprecedentedly complex and interconnected,
bold and innovative research agendas that address the ‘mediated
environment’ with an eye toward creatingcross-breeding within cultural
studies are called for.
The second standpoint that underlies the crux of the themed issue is the
essential need to bring in knowledge and perspectives from localities
that remain on the margins in terms of their visibility in academic
studies. While the actual and virtual sites and locales (e.g. legacy
media, museums, literature, film, music, archives, academic
publications) where narrative and scholarly interventions materialize
and constitute /spaces of narrativity/ (see Christensen et al, 2018) or,
simply put, ‘mediat/ing/ environments’, are located in or originate from
predominantly western hubs, visibility of locally situated knowledge and
content from ‘mediat/ed/ environments’ (e.g. the Arctic, the Amazon,
Pacific Islands, etc.) which experiencethe impacts of
environmentaldegradation at a much higher degree are rendered peripheral.
_Content_
The articles the journal issue brings together will explore various
constructions of the human and non-human environments and environmental
change as these are mediated through narratives in various venues,
creating a recent and hybrid account of how we imagine and reproduce the
environment.
We invite abstracts for papers based on research from areas of inquiry
related with the mediation of environmental narratives as well as
cognate disciplines in the social sciences and humanities. Submissions
from non-Western contexts are most particularly welcome. Research that
crosses disciplinary boundaries is encouraged, as are innovative
approaches that combine practical and scholarly standpoints. Articles
may choose to address the following topics, or pursue others that are of
relevance to the issue theme:
·Local -global positionings of environmental problems and themes
·Environmental migration
·Environment in art and activism
·Political change and civic discourse
·Indigeneity and the environment
·Environmental time / chronotopes
·Environmental security and risk in everyday visions / mediations
·Mediated disasters and utopian and/dystopian futures
·Environment, tourism and travel
·Environment and labor
·Environment and health
·Environment and material resources
·Gendered and ecofeminist considerations
·Religious / theological narratives
·Sustainability and land sovereignty
·Environmental impacts of the media and cultural industries
Submitters may choose to focus on electronic media, news, literature,
popular science publications, films and entertainment media, virtual
environments, popular organizational venues, museums or urban space
(e.g. street art and graffiti).
*References*
Christensen, M., Åberg, A., Lidström, S., & Larsen, K. (2018).
Environmental themes in popular narratives, /Environmental
Communication, /Vol 12 (1), 1-6.
Nixon, R. (2011) Slow Violence and the Environmentalism of the Poor,
Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Please send 350 to 500-word abstracts and short bios to
(miyase.christensen /at/ ims.su.se) <mailto:(miyase.christensen /at/ ims.su.se)> (AND
cc’ed to (miyachristensen /at/ yahoo.com) <mailto:(miyachristensen /at/ yahoo.com)>)
by *15 June 2021. *Authors of selected submissions will be notified by
*25 June 2021*. Full papers (6500-8000 words) are due* 15 November 2021*.
_*NO PAYMENT BY THE AUTHORS IS REQUIRED. *_
---------------
The COMMLIST
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier. Please use it responsibly and wisely.
--
To subscribe or unsubscribe, please visit http://commlist.org/
--
Before sending a posting request, please always read the guidelines at http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
URL: http://nicocarpentier.net
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]