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[Commlist] Call For Book Chapters: Beyond Networks of Domination: Rethinking Machinic Media, Digitality & Cinema of our Times
Tue Jan 02 11:12:33 GMT 2024
Call For Book Chapters: Beyond Networks of Domination: Rethinking
Machinic Media, Digitality & Cinema of our Times
Editors: Ananya Roy Pratihar(IMIS,Bhubaneswar), Saswat Samay Das (IIT,
Kharagpur) & Shashibhushan Nayak(GP Nayagarh)
The biopolitical schemas for restructuring machinic networks of Media,
Digital, and cinema do not stand as productive mimicries of mediations
prerequisite for effecting an anthropological clearing (with Cracks,
throws and blows, as Sloterdjik puts it) or grafting some kind of
symbolic unity on chaotic materiality. Rather, such schemas act as
ambivalent double-pincered mechanisms, turning loose incessant networked
flows on the one hand, only to reduce them to domesticable or governable
totalities on the other. If Deleuze & Guattari show how such networks
lead to the creation of a control or surveillance society committed to
colonizing what Husserl calls Lebenswelt (the life world), reducing its
pulsations to algorithmic dividuals, Donna Haraway and Manuel Castells
show how an interplay between desiring networks of media, digitality and
cinema leads to the production of what they call informatics of
domination when it is coupled with biopolitical agendas. Thinkers such
as Nancy Fraser indicate how progressive networks in neoliberal
societies bear a Janus face, hiding underneath their progressive
orientation a regressive economy of ideas, opening up an uncompromising
field of dialectical contradictions that turns networked flows,
passages, archipelagos and routes to dispositif or worse dead ends.
However, while tracing the historical genesis of networks to colonialism
or stressing their subsequent bio-politicization, materialist thinkers
such as Deleuze & Guattari, Haraway, Braidotti, or Katherine Hayles do
not posit de-essentialized expressions of networks as a kind of
insidious metaphysical grammar. Rather, they view networks as actual
expressions of machinic materiality and posit faith in the inter-related
dynamism of networks to lead humanity out of the morass that humanist
reductive mediation of such dynamism leads us to. Deleuze and Guattari
turn towards stressing the deterritorializing capacity of networks. The
stress they put on the need for finding new weapons of resistance
against the biopolitical manipulation of networks only supplements this
capacity, for with their conviction that even primary assemblages such
as signs or senses arise out of the workings of an abstract machine
immanent to these assemblages, they seem least inclined towards
indicating that such weapons needs to be dialectically opposed to
networks and may be used to arrive at a utopian anthropological clearing
beyond them. As Guattari says, "There are material machines and
immaterial machines, technical machines and imaginary machines, desiring
machines and abstract machines, machine inside the machine, nested like
fractals…Guattari advocates viewing machines in their complex totality
in all their (networked) avatars and resists attempts to essentialize
them or the assemblages they compose.
Thinkers such as Latour stress the necessity of having broader, bigger
and more effective networks comprised of human and non-human actants to
release us from the humanist organization of society that leads us to
deadlocks. Haraway rethinks the clarion call by Deleuze to find new
weapons of resistance only to put forward the machinic and networked
figure of Cyborg as the new war machine, a machinic assemblage that she
calls the cat’s cradle, which synthesizes the organic and the
non-organic, the machine & the body and the physical and the non-physical.
Similarly, thinkers such as Patricia Pisters foreground the machinic
orientation of minor films. They view such orientation as nurturing the
potential to both abolish clichés, dullness, and normative
subjectivation and transform subjects puppeteered by representationalist
populist cinema into what they call super-jects who might bear the
potential to create a new world order.
Is then becoming a pure network, nodes of machinic connections or
Haraway’s string figures, the only rejoinder against the biopolitical
restructuration of Networks? One needs to remember that networked
movements such as the Arab Spring, the Occupy Movement and most
recently, the Gezi Park protests in Turkey have failed to bring about
the required shift, let alone create fresh ethical bindings between the
chaotic multitudes and that many social commentaries claim that such
networked protests have large bark, but no bite.
However, then, is there any alternative to combating networks with
networks, pitting open-ended ecosophical networks against crampy and
claustrophobic networks of neoliberalism, with the redundancy of
classical Marxist struggle against the biopolitical machinery? How does
critical disclosure of schizoanalytic desire to blur the libidinal and
political economy divide help us, with Berardi and Fisher putting
forward such ampliative networks as effective tools, meant both for
mapping and effecting a revolutionary breakthrough, a Kairos, in
relation to the current scenario? With experimentations in media,
digitality and cinema constituting the liminal zone of nomad science,
will creating a Spherological unity among such sciences effect a
deterritorializing rupture with the current predicament. With creative
thinking making way for the untimely, can we have an alternative
mechanism of resistance to grassroot the flows, as Manuel Castells puts it?
We invite papers that could both extend and critique the experimental
media, digitality and cinema of our times. Simultaneously, we also need
papers that reflect the potential for reinventing the schizoanalytic or
experimental mode of media, digitality and cinema in order to do justice
to Deleuze’s clarion call for finding new weapons of resistance.
Submissions:
Abstracts of about 200 words, including six keywords, a 50-word
bio-note, institutional affiliation, and contact details, should be
emailed by 01 March 2024 to (shashienglish /at/ gmail.com) as a single MS Word
document attachment.
Chapter requirements: A chapter should be 4000-5000 words, including
footnotes and bibliography adhering to the MLA 9th edition.
Important Dates:
Deadline for abstract submission: 01 March 2024
Abstract selection notification: 30 March 2024
Complete Paper Submission: 01 October 2024
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