Archive for calls, March 2025

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[Commlist] CFP: Murmurations in Avian Technoscience

Thu Mar 13 18:17:08 GMT 2025





CALL FOR PAPERS REMINDER
Murmurations in Avian Technoscience
A Special Section of Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience

GUEST EDITORS:
Maya Livio (American University)
Pamela Perrimon (University of Southern California)
Hamsini Sridharan (University of Southern California)

DEADLINE: March 31, 2025

ABBREVIATED CALL:
In this special section, we invite birders, that is, those who notice avian relations, to explore how birds enter, become, confound, or mutate technology (expansively defined). We seek to engage in how the stuff of birds—their beaks, bones, and feathers—is datafied, mechanized, and digitized. We are also interested in constellations in flight that reflect on avian boundaries and breakdowns as they intersect gendered, queer, crip, raced, classed, and anticolonial questions, highlighting what may otherwise go unremarked when birds become a passive thing to ‘think with.’

Submissions might include engagement with avian technoscience as it relates to:

—Birds becoming technology (e.g. data, models, maps, sensors,sentinels, as well as Indigenous and non-Western approaches to technology) and how, for example, these may reinforce or challenge dominant modes of knowledge production

—Technology becoming avian (e.g. biomimicry, or the use of bird bodies and behaviors as technological reference points) as, for instance, instrumentalized for military tech development

—Technologies of ornithological study (e.g. bird banding/ringing, radar, passive acoustic monitoring, 3D scanning, machine learning) and, for example, their relationship to the colonial logics of capture

—Technologies of managing avian life and death (e.g. technologies for conservation, de-extinction, bird breeding, reproduction, and response to avian zoonoses) and how, for instance, they instantiate control of sex, gender, and sexuality

—Contact zones between birds and technological infrastructures (e.g. interactions between birds and cell towers, energy infrastructures, etc.) as related to environmental and multispecies justice concerns, for example

—The link between birds and technologies of surveillance (e.g. drones, birdfeeder cams, and nest cams) and, for instance, what they surface about racialized hypervisibility and invisibility

—Bird taxonomy and classification technologies, and, for example, how they reinforce hegemonic categorization

—Community science platforms and other collective modes of bird tracking, including, for instance, their exclusions of marginalized peoples and the consequences of those exclusions for birds —And creative approaches to imaging, sounding, or sensemaking of birds through media and computation technologies relating to any of the above

LINK TO FULL CALL: https://catalystjournal.org/index.php/catalyst/announcement/view/976 <https://catalystjournal.org/index.php/catalyst/announcement/view/976>

We welcome diverse submission formats including: Writing (scholarly, creative, interviews, reviews, and more); creative research/research-creation; visual, moving image, and sonic artworks; media rich essays; and other innovative approaches. Interdisciplinary research is particularly encouraged.

To be considered for inclusion in this themed section, please send an abstract or proposal (300-500 words) and a short bio (max 250 words) to Maya Livio ((livio /at/ american.edu) <mailto:(livio /at/ american.edu)>), Pamela Perrimon ((perrimon /at/ usc.edu) <mailto:(perrimon /at/ usc.edu)>), and Hamsini Sridharan ((hamsinis /at/ usc.edu) <mailto:(hamsinis /at/ usc.edu)>) with “Murmurations” in the subject line by March 31, 2025.

ABOUT THE JOURNAL: Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, and Technoscience serves the expanding interdisciplinary field of feminist science and technology studies (STS) by supporting theoretically inventive and methodologically creative scholarship incorporating approaches from critical public health, disability studies, sci-art, technology and digital media studies, history and philosophy of science and medicine, and more. Catalyst publishes peer-reviewed, critically and theoretically engaged feminist STS scholarship.

Selected papers and projects will be invited to submit fully developed submissions. No payment from authors will be required.

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