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[Commlist] Call for Contributions: Surveillance/Art Edited Collection
Fri Apr 29 15:46:44 GMT 2022
Call for Contributions
Edited collection: Surveillance/Art: A Creative Address of Surveillance
Logics
Edited by Susan Cahill, with Julia Chan, Stéfy McKnight, and sava saheli
singh
Deadline for proposals: May 15, 2022
This edited collection brings together a selection of creative,
critical, and scholarly works that speak to each other in their
engagement with art and surveillance. We invite artworks, art writing,
and scholarly writing that address a range of topics associated with
surveillance. Specifically, we are interested in contributions that
situate art in relation to the logics, beliefs, and value systems that
enable and justify the applications of surveillance as a system and
technology of social control (Browne 2012; Maynard 2017). Media studies
and communications scholars are welcome to submit.
Our definition of surveillance is broad: we think of it as the social,
technological, cultural, political, and historical structures that
dictate the will and capacity to monitor which people are free to move,
settle, and live, and which people are not. We see these structures as
working in conjunction with colonial-capitalism, white supremacy, and
cis-heteropatriarchy, and are interested in creative works and writing
that critically think through these intersections. We situate this
collection in relation to broader scholarship that discusses the
implications and histories of surveillance in relation to race, gender,
class, sexuality, and ability (for instance, works by Browne 2015;
Dubrosky and Magnet 2015; Kafer and Grinberg 2019; Khan et al. 2022;
Monahan 2017; Saltes 2013). Proposed contributions to this edited
collection can engage with any historical periods and geopolitical spaces.
Importantly, this collection forefronts art practices as generative and
integral participants in historical and contemporary understandings of
surveillance. Art and creativity are broad terms, and can refer to a
number of mediums and disciplines. For this collection, we focus on
mediums of art that would be conventionally associated with visual art
galleries and museums: painting, sculpture, drawing, printmaking, film
and video, installations, site-specific art, performance, and
photography (if you are not sure whether your work fits with our call,
please do not hesitate to reach out). With these works, we are
interested in contributions that critique surveillance structures,
counter-surveil the agents and systems of surveillance, and present them
to audiences in ways that denormalize these structures to reveal the
often invisible and unquestioned logics that govern them. In this way,
we encourage contributions that position art as a creative methodology,
a way to think about artistic and critical interventions that trouble,
reveal, challenge, and resist surveillance structures and larger
understandings of them.
Once assembled, the edited collection will be submitted for publication
to a scholarly press, which will involve the peer-review process.
Submission guide and timelines:
Please send submissions and any questions to (art.surveillance /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(art.surveillance /at/ gmail.com)>.
All submissions should be sent by May 15, 2022, and include a 100-word
bio per contributor. For artworks, please send a 250-word artist
statement and up to 5 images. For written pieces, please send a 500-word
abstract. All attachments should be in pdf form, except for images,
which should be in jpg form. If the artwork is in video format, please
send a link as part of your submission.
We will respond to submissions by June 15, 2022. For accepted pieces,
full versions will be due December 01, 2022. Format and structure of
artwork contributions will depend on the specifics of the medium and
reproduction. Full versions of written pieces will be 5000-7000 words,
including notes and references.
/Note: Authors will not be expected to pay to be published./
References
Browne, Simone. 2012. “Race and Surveillance.” Routledge Handbook of
Surveillance Studies, eds. Kirstie Ball, Kevin Haggerty, and David Lyon,
Routledge.
Browne, Simone. 2016. Dark Matters, Duke University Press.
Dubrosky, Rachel E. and Shoshana Amielle Magnet, eds. 2015. Feminist
Surveillance Studies, 2015.
Kafer, Gary and Daniel Grinberg, eds. 2019. “Queer Surveillance,”
special themed issue of Surveillance & Society 17, 5.
Khan, Sheila, Nazir Ahmed Can, and Helen Machado, eds. 2022. Racism and
Racial Surveillance, Routledge.
Maynard, Robyn. 2017. Policing Black Lives, Fernwood Publishing.
Monahan, Torin. 2017. “Regulating belonging: surveillance, inequality,
and the cultural production of abjection.” Journal of Cultural Economy
10, 2: 191-206.
Saltes, Natasha. 2013. “‘Abnormal’ Bodies on the Borders of Inclusion:
Biopolitics and the Paradox of Disability Surveillance.” Surveillance &
Society 11, 1/2: 55-73.
link for this info:
https://akimbo.ca/listings/call-for-contributions-surveillance-art-edited-collection/
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