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[Commlist] Public Knowledge - the Academy and Beyond (Call for contributions to New Formations special issue)
Tue Oct 18 12:43:23 GMT 2022
*Public Knowledge: the Academy and Beyond*
A special issue of /New Formations: A journal of culture / power /
politics /
//
Now in its fifth decade of publication, /New Formations/ maintains an
international reputation for publishing rigorous peer-reviewed
scholarship in the critical humanities and social sciences. The journal
accepts contributions within a wide range of disciplines, while
specialising as a forum for debates and discussions around the political
and analytical uses of cultural theory.
The journal editors have decided to commission an issue on the politics
of the academy and other sites of social knowledge-production, now in
the past and in the future.
With the university in ruins, what forms of public and collective
institution could prove hospitable to radical pedagogy, research and
knowledge-production? Can we use new media and new modes of social
engagement to make new forms of learning and teaching possible? Are
podcasts and YouTube the future? What lessons can we draw from the
history of Workers Education, Workers Inquiry, Free Universities and
democratic schooling? What remaining role can critical education play in
the post-neoliberal school or university? How can workers in these
institutions collaborate with students and other stakeholder to reclaim
their resources and their legitimating power? How can we respond to
direct attacks on progressive history and theory on educational
curricula caught in the culture wars? What is the politics of ‘open
access’ publishing in the case both publicly and privately funded
research? How will competition for international students continue to
reshape both educational institutions and the societies in which they
are embedded? How can classic and / or recent texts in cultural, social
and political theory help us to think about these issues? What role can
ideas and practices such as consciousness-raising, art-as-education or
‘fugitive study’ play in formulating new responses to these question?
Please send abstracts (250-300 words) and a biographical note to
(nfsubmissions /at/ me.com) <mailto:(nfsubmissions /at/ me.com)> and
(j.gilbert /at/ uel.ac.uk) <mailto:(j.gilbert /at/ uel.ac.uk)>. The deadline for
receipt of abstracts is November 21st 2022.
Decisions will be made about inclusion in the special issue by December
7th, 2002
Deadline for receipt of contributions will be May 31st 2023. All
contributions will be subject to standard blind peer review, and
publication of the volume is planned for November 2023.
For information about /New Formations / see
https://journals.lwbooks.co.uk/newformations/
<https://journals.lwbooks.co.uk/newformations/>
Open Access Policy: The journal is not published open access, being a
major income-stream for Lawrence & Wishart, one of the UK’s oldest
progressive publishers. A selection of articles from each issue is
always made available open access, but we cannot guarantee in advance
that this will apply to any particular article. Institutional fees for
conversion of articles to open access are generally negotiated ad hoc,
but fall within normal industry ranges. The journal is available via
the usual digital outlets for scholarly publications, such as Ebsco and
Project Muse.
Dear colleagues
Please share this call for contributions widely.
*Public Knowledge: the Academy and Beyond*
A special issue of /New Formations: A journal of culture / power /
politics /
//
Now in its fifth decade of publication, /New Formations/ maintains an
international reputation for publishing rigorous peer-reviewed
scholarship in the critical humanities and social sciences. The journal
accepts contributions within a wide range of disciplines, while
specialising as a forum for debates and discussions around the political
and analytical uses of cultural theory.
The journal editors have decided to commission an issue on the politics
of the academy and other sites of social knowledge-production, now in
the past and in the future.
With the university in ruins, what forms of public and collective
institution could prove hospitable to radical pedagogy, research and
knowledge-production? Can we use new media and new modes of social
engagement to make new forms of learning and teaching possible? Are
podcasts and YouTube the future? What lessons can we draw from the
history of Workers Education, Workers Inquiry, Free Universities and
democratic schooling? What remaining role can critical education play in
the post-neoliberal school or university? How can workers in these
institutions collaborate with students and other stakeholder to reclaim
their resources and their legitimating power? How can we respond to
direct attacks on progressive history and theory on educational
curricula caught in the culture wars? What is the politics of ‘open
access’ publishing in the case both publicly and privately funded
research? How will competition for international students continue to
reshape both educational institutions and the societies in which they
are embedded? How can classic and / or recent texts in cultural, social
and political theory help us to think about these issues? What role can
ideas and practices such as consciousness-raising, art-as-education or
‘fugitive study’ play in formulating new responses to these question?
Please send abstracts (250-300 words) and a biographical note to
(nfsubmissions /at/ me.com) <mailto:(nfsubmissions /at/ me.com)> and
(j.gilbert /at/ uel.ac.uk) <mailto:(j.gilbert /at/ uel.ac.uk)>. The deadline for
receipt of abstracts is November 21st 2022.
Decisions will be made about inclusion in the special issue by December
7th, 2002
Deadline for receipt of contributions will be May 31st 2023. All
contributions will be subject to standard blind peer review, and
publication of the volume is planned for November 2023.
For information about /New Formations / see
https://journals.lwbooks.co.uk/newformations/
<https://journals.lwbooks.co.uk/newformations/>
Open Access Policy: The journal is not published open access, being a
major income-stream for Lawrence & Wishart, one of the UK’s oldest
progressive publishers. A selection of articles from each issue is
always made available open access, but we cannot guarantee in advance
that this will apply to any particular article. Institutional fees for
conversion of articles to open access are generally negotiated ad hoc,
but fall within normal industry ranges. The journal is available via
the usual digital outlets for scholarly publications, such as Ebsco and
Project Muse.
This call can be found and shared here:
https://jeremygilbertwriting.wordpress.com/2022/10/18/call-for-contributions-to-new-formations-special-issue/
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