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[Commlist] CfP: "Global Perspectives on Surveillance" (Jump Cut)
Fri Sep 15 15:32:15 GMT 2023
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*Global Perspectives on Surveillance*
Call for Papers
Special Section of Jump Cut: A Review of Contemporary Media
(editor-in-chief Julia Lesage)
https://www.ejumpcut.org/home.html <https://www.ejumpcut.org/home.html>
Section Editor: Gary Kafer (University of Chicago)
*Description*
This special section of Jump Cut seeks original research and review
essays that examine the global circuits of surveillance that
increasingly mark contemporary social and political life.
Towards the end of the twentieth century, surveillance studies scholars
proclaimed the arrival of a “surveillance society” (Marx 1985; Gandy
1989; Lyon 1994), which soon became global by the turn of the century
following the attacks on 9/11 and the War on Terror (Lyon 2004; Murakami
2009; Ström 2020). In many ways indebted to the emergence of novel
digital and communication tools, such critiques called attention to
increasing levels of tracking practices by national governments and
corporations to preempt threats and safeguard capital. No doubt, the
global parameters of surveillance were put on full display with the
Snowden leaks of 2013 as the world became cognizant of The Five Eyes
intelligence alliance (Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United
Kingdom, and the United States), which was soon followed by media
coverage of China’s Digital Silk Road Initiative.
And yet, even as these developments exposed the globality of
surveillance systems, such frameworks tend to maintain the ‘global’ as
simply a reference point for the ‘Global North’ and its centers of data
accumulation and exchange. Such narratives are troublesome, not in the
least for the way that they ignore how surveillance has historically
always been transnational in scope, such as in the development of
biometrics and identification documents in chattel slavery and penal
colonies across colonial and imperial regimes (Browne 2015; Heynen and
van der Meulen 2019). At the same time, some global frameworks ignore
how many surveillance devices are first developed and tested in sites of
settler colonial and capitalist violence—often in the Global
South—before being distributed by international defense industries for
use elsewhere, such as in Israel’s occupation of Palestine (Halper 2015)
or the repression of indigenous communities at the borders of settler
states (Schaeffer 2022).
Following suit, this special section of Jump Cut explores how the global
remains a fraught, if not necessary, framework to grapple with the
contemporary politics of surveillance. We invite research that
approaches such issues from the fields of media studies, film studies,
visual studies, communication studies, and related disciplines to
consider how surveillance is a global process located within
historically situated cultural, political, and social practices. Such
research can address concerns in the twenty-first century as well as
longer histories of surveillance. Potential topics include (but are not
limited to):
• Technologies of border security
• Biometrics – past, present, future
• Internet infrastructures
• Ecologies of resource extraction
• Platforms and outsourced labor
• Militarization of police
• Counter-practices to surveillance
• Global surveillance and documentary aesthetics
• Representations of global surveillance in entertainment media
• Social media in the Global South
• Algorithms and discrimination
*Submission Information:*
We welcome a range of submissions including article length essays, short
reflection papers, opinion pieces, book reviews, and film reviews.
Submissions will undergo a peer-review and revision process prior to
publication. Submissions should be original work, neither previously
published nor under consideration for publication elsewhere. All
references to previous work by contributors should be masked in the text
(e.g., “Author 2020”). Please submit your document in a MS
Word-compatible format.
No payment is required from authors.
*Timeline*
Submissions should be emailed to (gkafer /at/ uchicago.edu)
<mailto:(gkafer /at/ uchicago.edu)> by January 15, 2024. Please put “JC –
Global Surveillance” in the subject line.
Decisions will be communicated by the end of March 2024.
Final revisions will be due June 1, 2024.
The special section will be published in a forthcoming issue of Jump Cut
in the winter of 2024.
*References:*
Browne, Simone. 2015. Dark Matters: On the Surveillance of Blackness.
Durham: Duke University Press.
Gandy, Oscar. 1989. “The Surveillance Society: Information Technology
and Bureaucratic Social Control.” Journal of Communication 39: 61–76.
Halper, Jeff. 2015. War Against the People: Israel, the Palestinians and
Global Pacification. London: Pluto Press.
Heynen, Robert, and Emily van der Meulen (eds.). 2019. Making
Surveillance States: Transnational Histories. Toronto: University of
Toronto Press.
Lyon, David. 1994. The Electronic Eye: The Rise of the Surveillance
Society. Cambridge: Polity Press.
Lyon, David. 2004. “Globalizing Surveillance.” International Sociology
19: 135–49.
Marx, Gary. 1985. “The Surveillance Society: The Threat of 1984-style
Techniques.” The Futurist 6: 21–6.
Murakami Wood, David. 2009. “The ‘Surveillance Society’: Questions of
History, Place and Culture.” European Journal of Criminology 6(2): 179-194.
Schaeffer, Felicity Amaya. 2022. Unsettled Borders: The Militarized
Science of Surveillance on Sacred Indigenous Land. Durham: Duke
University Press.
Ström, Timothy Erik. 2020. Globalizing Surveillance. Lanham, MD: Rowman
& Littlefield Publishers.
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