[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[Commlist] Feminist Encounters CfP, Special Issue on Feminist Technoimaginaries
Mon Dec 05 11:38:20 GMT 2022
*/Abstract submission deadline extended till January 15th, 2023!/*
*/Feminist Encounters: /*
*/A Journal of Critical Studies in Culture and Politics/*
*/https://www.lectitopublishing.nl/feminist-encounters
<https://www.lectitopublishing.nl/feminist-encounters>/*
*/Autumn 2025/*
*Special Issue:*
*Peripheral Visions of Alternative Futures: Feminist Techno-imaginaries*
Feminism has a long history of wrestling with technologies: not only
with the inequalities and blind spots inherent in research, production,
and marketing, but also with the effects of different technological
forms and arrangements on social relationships, ways of life, and on the
body. Technologically permeated societies are a global reality, and
feminist, queer, critical race, decolonial, and crip theories are
pivotal in offering critical analyses and ways of imagining, producing,
and using technologies differently. This issue of Feminist Encounters
sets out to re-inspect the entanglements between technology and
imagination from a range of feminist perspectives in disciplines like
STS, philosophy and critical theory, media history and media
archaeology, cultural history, and cultural and comparative literature
studies.
Greek-French philosopher Cornelius Castoriadis’ theorisation of the
radical individual imagination and the socially instituting imaginary
(1975) foregrounds the creative, world-building function that shared
forms of meaning play in our social worlds. The history of Western
philosophy tends to regard imagination as mere
reproduction/representation, i.e. a mental copy of the real; in
contrast, Castoriadis’ work offers a conceptualisation of the
imagination and the imaginary as inherently creative and productive of
the social. Accordingly, this special issue asks how diverse feminist
techno-imaginaries can help us rethink, envision, but also transform
historically stabilised forms of meaning, especially shared
understandings of what technology can do and how it can transform our
social worlds. Inviting contributions from diverse local and regional
contexts, this issue sets out to investigate the implications of
socially and culturally situated feminist techno-imaginaries, i.e.,
beliefs, accounts, and visions of possible, desirable, alternative, and
radically different futures from diverse feminist perspectives. The
issue will interrogate how these future visions relate to extant shared
understandings of “forms of social life and social order attainable
through, and supportive of, advances in science and technology”
(Jasannoff, 2015, 13).
In the field of Science and Technology Studies (STS), Sheila Jasannoff
conjoins the “normativity of the imagination with the materiality of
networks” in her understanding of “sociotechnical imaginaries” “as
collectively held, institutionally stabilized, and publicly performed
visions of desirable futures” (Jasannoff, 2015, 13). Taking her
definition as one possible point of departure, this issue of Feminist
Encounters seeks to survey the ways in which feminist techno-imaginaries
relate to current and mainstream technological developments, but also to
peripheral technological pasts and possible futures. For this purpose,
we take the term techno-imaginaries broadly, as referring also to those
visions that are not necessarily institutionally stabilized and are
collectively held only in specific milieus.
Feminist accounts (both future- and past-oriented) tend to remain on the
margins of academic discussions about socio-technological entanglements,
their histories, prognoses, and poetics. Dominant societal
understandings of technological transformations and their impact on
thought, imagination, and society therefore tend to omit numerous paths
not taken; inventions that turned out to be, or are presented as being,
a cul-de-sac; developmental failures with unfulfilled potentials for
furthering social justice; and an account of geopolitical inequalities
in global technological competition, labour exploitation, and ecological
impact.
Hegemonic techno-imaginaries also lack proposals for
technologically-entangled radically different futures that would depart
from present forms of labour exploitation and commodity consumption,
from currently normative gender- and sexuality-scripts, from structural
racism, the exploitation of natural resources with concomitant climate
impact, and ways of restricting access. Reflecting upon diverse and
intersecting feminist techno-imaginaries, we believe, can help us
address and redress some of these shortcomings.
Feminist theory itself offers a reach archive of utopian, dystopian, and
ambivalent technological imaginaries, such as Donna Haraway’s powerful
figure of the cyborg, Shulamith Firestone’s proposal for externalising
reproductive processes, echoed by xenofeminists today, Rosi Braidotti’s
writings on the posthuman, to name just a few. These proliferate also in
feminist fiction, from Octavia Butler’s complex interrogation of
techno-scientific alienness in her xenogenesis trilogy, to Marge
Percey’s vision of a technologically enhanced utopian post-gender
society Mattapoisett.
We are especially interested in affirmative takes on the feminist
archive, as articulated by political theorist Kathi Weeks (2015), which
can help us retrieve visions of alternative futures that can be
productively repurposed today. These visions can also function as
critical examinations of our past and present, yet are/were often
overlooked in mainstream knowledge production. They comprise sci-fi
visions as Afrofuturism Africanfuturism, Arabfuturism, Sinofuturism,
Disabled futurism, Indigenous futurism, Queer futurism, Ecotopia etc.,
as well as theoretical, philosophical, political, or historical
interventions. As philosopher Michelle le Doeuff has shown, while often
declaratively excising imagery as the other of rational discourse,
philosophical theories themselves almost always copiously deploy
imagery, often to entrench socially sanctioned forms of exclusion (1980)
– something that could most likely be said of theory more broadly. This
issue thus also offers an arena for discussing how images of possible
futures are deployed, or how they implicitly animate philosophical
discussions and theoretical discourse about technological innovation and
techno-dispositifs, especially – seen from diverse feminist perspectives
– what kinds of exclusions they perpetuate, or alternatively, what
arenas for radical social imagination they open up.
This issue takes cue from Afrofuturist articulations of painful pasts to
imagine new futures rooted in black culture and innovation, and from
queer theory's take on queer utopianism, which includes “a backward
glance that enacts a future vision” (Muñoz 2009, 4), which can be
understood in terms of Walter Benjamin’s tiger’s leap into the past that
retrieves unrealised emancipatory potentials of past events (1940).
Apart from offering feminist critiques of hegemonic or mainstream
techno-imaginaries, this issue thus also centres peripheral or
minoritarian techno-imaginaries of the past and present that enact
alternative future vistas. According to Jussi Parikka, these peripheral
futurisms or counterfuturisms ask: “What sort of discourses, narratives
– including practices of time and futurism – are apt for a consideration
of the current political moment and what forms of time can harbour any
sort of liberating potential that work against the already existing
times?” (2017, 2)
Thinking about future techno-imaginaries from diverse feminist
perspectives may involve very specific questions, such as matrices of
human : machine interaction, user experience, access to technology, or
innovation and maintenance scenarios. It may also involve thinking
through techno-imaginaries and how they are activated in the context of
different political paradigms of the past and the present, or in the
context of utopian and dystopian visions of the future in critical
theory and philosophy, literature, visual arts, music, cinema, TV, in
the performing arts, on social media, and other cultural artefacts.
Finally, it may involve memory work, i.e. unpacking locally or
culturally specific past horizons of expectations regarding
technological advances and their implications for future scenarios in
various contexts, from policy to historiography and art.
This special issue of Feminist Encounters on Feminist Techno-imaginaries
offers an opportunity to articulate in novel ways how, through diverse
social imaginaries of technological innovation, technology and feminism
impact one another in modern societies. Abstracts may be submitted on
any topic related to this theme. These topics include (but are not
limited to) the following:
·Techno-imaginaries in philosophy and ethics of technology, critical
theory, STS, from feminist perspectives
·Historical techno-imaginaries from feminist perspectives
·Futurisms from different feminist perspectives (Afrofuturism,
counterfuturism, Sinofuturism…)
·Memories of technological change and nostalgia for obsolete
technologies, from feminist perspectives
·Technology, feminism, and decoloniality
·Gender politics, feminism, and techno-imaginaries in Eastern Europe and
the global South
·Feminist techno-imaginaries of climate change and environmental policies
·Feminist imaginaries of sexuality and AI
·Feminist perspectives on imaginations of reproductive technologies
·Feminist perspectives on techno-imaginaries in mainstream media
·Techno-imaginaries in feminist media
Feminist Encounters invites submissions of articles of 8000-9,000 words
on any aspect of the topic outlined above. We welcome diverse and
divergent feminist perspectives on techno-imaginaries and their
theoretical, practical, and poetic impact. Contributions may range from
highly theoretical to more empirically based.
The special issue will be edited by Guest Editors: Dr Jasmina Šepetavc
(Research Associate, Centre for Cultural and Religious Studies,
Department of Cultural Studies, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia),
Katja Čičigoj (PhD candidate, Department of Philosophy, Paderborn
University, Germany) and Associate Prof Dr Natalija Majsova, (Centre for
Cultural and Religious Studies, Department of Cultural Studies,
University of Ljubljana, Slovenia).
Abstracts of 400 words and a short biographical note (not more than 100
words) should be sent to the guest editors directly at:
(Jasmina.sepetavc /at/ fdv.uni-lj.si) <mailto:(Jasmina.sepetavc /at/ fdv.uni-lj.si)>
(Katja.cicigoj /at/ uni-paderborn.de) <mailto:(Katja.cicigoj /at/ uni-paderborn.de)>
(Natalija.majsova /at/ fdv.uni-lj.si) <mailto:(Natalija.majsova /at/ fdv.uni-lj.si)>
Chief Editor of Feminist Encounters: Sally R Munt, University of Sussex UK
Submission deadline for abstracts: January 15th 2023
Decisions regarding acceptance: February 15th 2023
Submission deadline for manuscripts September 1^st 2023
Decisions following peer review March 1^st 2024
Revised manuscript submission September 1^st 2024
Publication September 2025.
There are no article processing charges (APCs) or similar author-borne
expenses related to this journal and call.
---------------
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/ commlist.org)
URL: http://nicocarpentier.net
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]