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[Commlist] CFP: A Special Issue for QED: A Journal in GLBTQ Worldmaking
Mon Dec 06 21:57:55 GMT 2021
A Special Issue for QED: A Journal in GLBTQ Worldmaking
Re-examining Communication and Media Practices in/across Queer Asia
This is an open call to academics, educators, activists, public
intellectuals, artists, policy and culture makers, and communication and
media practitioners.
We have been witnessing ongoing academic concerns about Queer Asia in
various academic disciplines (Luther & Ung Loh, 2019; Martin, Jackson,
McLelland, & Yue, 2008; Spigel, Berry, Martin, & Yue, 2003), but these
investigations have not received sufficient attention in the field of
GLBTQ studies rooted in the Western academic tradition. Put simply, the
academic discussions of Queer Asia are still underdeveloped. Research on
Queer Asia lacks representation even though we increasingly witness the
vibrancy of queer scenes in the region thanks to changing political
situations, the rapid distribution of newer communication technology,
and the increasing transnational exchanges in and across the region.
Based on academic and non-academic concerns in queer issues that are
geographically and culturally diverse, this special issue seeks to
decolonize the Western-centric traditions of academic knowledge
productions and initiate more conversations about Queer Asian issues.
Here, it is important to maintain that thinking about, examining, and
conceptualizing Queer Asia is a rather challenging task. For example,
Asia exhibits mixed modalities in many sectors: contradicting values
such as 1) premodernity, modernity, and postmodernity; 2) Confucianism,
Christianity, Buddhism, Muslim, and other indigenous beliefs; 3)
monarchy, theocracy, communism, democracy, and other governmental
systems; and 4) developed economies, middle-income economies, and
developing economies. Indeed, Asia is an imagined region that reinforces
the white, Western cartography of the globe. Asia encompasses cultures
and nation-states that are vastly dissimilar and competitive in terms of
political systems, religions, economic structures, societal norms, and
cultural traditions. Hence, it is nearly impossible to uniformly apply
established theories to this region and to formulate a theory or method
that can explain Queer Asia. We better look into what is happening and
enrich historically saturated and culturally specific queer practices,
and thereby the discussion surrounding Queer Asia is not muffled by
Western-dominated theorizings of queerness.
To engage in this special issue, we demonstrate Queer Asia as a
theory/method. By this means, Queer Asia is a critical cultural theory
and method that not only problematizes Asia as a region but also
refashions Asia as an alternative lens for studying localized queer
issues and concerns of sexual and gender minoritarians (e.g., Chiang &
Wong, 2017; Yue, 2017). More specifically, Queer Asia troubles the ways
in which the manifestations, representations, and performances of
localized sexual and gender minoritarians reify and resist global,
transnational flows of Western queer formations, including GLBTQ human
rights. At the same time, Queer Asia reconsiders how
intra/inter-regional cultural (dis)connectivities play into locally
nuanced productions of sexual and gender minoritarian cultures. Queer
Asia is about centralizing queerness to unsettle the ordinary
cartography of Asia as a region in order to speak back to the
Western-centric theorizing and paradigms of queerness (Luther & Ung Loh,
2019). Hence, Queer Asia, which recognizes multiple convergences and
divergences of queerness in and across Asia, is not an area study. It is
about rewriting, remaking, and revising queer practices of Asia(nness)
as a multiple, unfinalized, and dynamic conception that decolonizes the
whiteness/Westernness of queer modernities as the global, transitional
normativity.
Overall, this special issue aims to examine how historical
particularities, contemporary sociopolitical events, and transregional
connectivity create Queer Asian communicative cultures and productions
in the proposed spaces in order to complicate Western-oriented queer
studies. By revisiting and traveling around the multiple localities of
Queer Asianness working with communication and media practices, we hope
to maintain a futuristic space where scholars continue to discuss Queer
Asia and contribute to building up Queer Asian studies further.
Contributors may submit an academic essay (6,000-7,000 including
references) or a forum discussion (1,000-3,000 words) that responds to
the following question for this issue: What’s happening in/across Queer
Asia as a space, not geographically limited?We want to answer this
question with a focus on communication and media practices in/across
Asia. By communication and/or media practices, we mean ongoing processes
and activities in which media technology, social institutions, and/or
relational settings alter, shape, and reinforce situated meanings.We
seek 250-500 word proposals that pay attention to underrepresented
issues and concerns of cultures, groups, and traditions overlooked by
the name of Queer Asia. Especially, we welcome essays from scholars,
educators, activists, artists, policy and culture makers, and
communication and media practitioners that disrupt and reshape existing
cisgender/nontrans-centric queer Asia(s).
When you submit a proposal, please indicate the contribution type:
academic essay or forum discussion.
Timeline:
250-500 word proposals due: February 28, 2022
Requests for full manuscripts: April 15, 2022
Full manuscripts due: August 15, 2022
Expected Publication: One of the 2023 issues
Please submit proposals to Jungmin Kwon ((jungmin.kwon /at/ pdx.edu)
<mailto:(jungmin.kwon /at/ pdx.edu)>) and Shinsuke Eguchi ((seguchi /at/ unm.edu)
<mailto:(seguchi /at/ unm.edu)>). Please feel safe and free to inquire with
questions or concerns before deadlines.
***No article processing fees or submission charges
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