[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[Commlist] CFP: Streets of Latin America: New battlegrounds of change
Wed Jul 12 13:14:50 GMT 2023
Extended deadline: CFP: Streets of Latin America: New battlegrounds of
change
Alternautas Special Issue
_Extended deadline_: 30^th of July 2023
Full article submission: 01^st of September 2023
Publication: December 2023
Email: (streetsoflatam /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(streetsoflatam /at/ gmail.com)>
Latin American streets have historically been the centre of revolts,
protests, and mass demonstrations of culture and religion (Gilbert,
1994). The recent wave of unrest in Bolivia and Peru and protests in
Ecuador have made world headlines. From the corta ruta in Argentina to a
series of upheavals in Brazil, recent events show how the street has
characterised a scenario of hope and fear, opportunity and repression,
creativity and precariousness (Boggerts, 2022). The media portrayal of
urban life in the region is often predicated on chaos, violence, and
submission. Still, the democratic possibilities of Latin American
streets as a politico-performative stage for social change remain
under-explored, except for contentious events.
Alternautas
<https://journals.warwick.ac.uk/index.php/alternautas/announcement/view/45>calls
for papers that will add to the growing scholarship about urban life in
the Global South and expand on the Latin American street as the
quintessential space for political and creative expression: occupying,
crafting, or staying in the streets, parks, and squares can pave social
and cultural transformation. Knowingly, these interventions have
empowered ulterior notions of citizenship as a form of public sphere
(Dabène, 2019). It includes social movements that not only react but
enact creative forms of resistance (Ryan, 2018), as users consistently
employ trending technologies to reinvent a received notion of space
(Levy, 2018).
From the pixadores in Sao Paulo to the murals of Oaxaca, urban
interventions provide unique examples of the living consciousness of the
Latin American metropolises
This open-access special issue aims to enable discussions about new
intersections between political and creative aspects that stem from
spatial and digital interventions in Latin American cities. It seeks to
unearth social justice demands that come from and reach the street
thanks to new practices, movements, or technologies. This issue also
aims to investigate how actors can re-orient or repurpose digital
technologies to place their critique of the public space in the region.
We pose the following questions: To what extent can artists,
practitioners, activists, and citizens shape the Latin American street
of the 21st century into a creative, digital, and political centre of
continuous demonstrations? To what degree can these actors render the
city into an enhanced battleground for renewed demands of socioeconomic,
ecological, racial, and gender equality? What are the current
limitations to forging more street-based, politically-driven creativity
towards democratic consolidation? As an interdisciplinary area of
interest, we invite contributions from areas that include, but are not
limited to:
Activist media in the city
Alternative media in both digital and analogical formats
Cinema or audio-visual in the city
Communist and Marxist media in the city
Ecological movements
Favela media studies
Feminist urban studies in Latin America
Folklore and traditional storytelling in the city
Geotagging and counter-mapping
LGBTQ+ or queer media in Latin America
Mural communications and art
Projection and light studies
Protest or counter-hegemonic communication
Public speaking or oral history traditions
Social movement media and the city
Sound art studies
Street art and unauthorised graffiti
Surveillance and society in Latin America
Technology, society and culture in Latin America
Urban public policies
Urban history revisited
250-word abstracts should be sent to (streetsoflatam /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(streetsoflatam /at/ gmail.com)> by the 30th April 2023. Submission is
free, and we encourage papers sent by media and communications scholars.
No article processing or any other charges are expected from prospective
authors.
References
Bogerts, L. (2022). The Aesthetics of Rule and Resistance: Analyzing
Political Street Art in Latin America. Germany: Berghahn Books.
Dabène, O. (2019). Street Art and Democracy in Latin
America. Germany: Springer International Publishing.
Gilbert, A. (1994) The Latin American City. London: Latin American Bureau.
Levy, H. (2018). Disrupting the old periphery: Alternative media,
inequality and counter-mapping in Brazil. Westminster Papers in
Communication and Culture, 13(2).
Ryan, H. E. (2018). Political Street Art: Communication, Culture and
Resistance in Latin America. United Kingdom: Routledge.
---------------
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]