Monthly Archives: June 2017

Call for Papers and Abstracts: Networks

EXCURSIONS JOURNAL 8:1
Call for Papers and Abstracts: ‘Networks’

Deadline for Symposium Abstracts: 31 July 2017
Deadline for Journal Articles: 31 October 2017

‘To operate within the matrix of power is not the same as to replicate uncritically relations of domination.’ Judith Butler, Gender Trouble (1990)

‘They have built tents across the campuses and lived there, both to show the impact indebtedness is having on their lives, to show that they need to move away from a university that is becoming more and more like a financial operation, more and more commercialised.’ Sylvia Federici, Education and the Enclosure of Knowledge in the Global University (2007)

‘One thanksgiving, Danny spent hours handing out flowers to people on a busy street. It was like he was trying to jumpstart a zone of contact in the world.’ Kathleen Steward, Ordinary Affects (2007)

The recent political turmoil, in both the US and European context, has made tangible the desire for dissolution of old networks of trade, communication and allies, and we find ourselves debating the formation of new structures, and their impact on the everyday as well as the political hierarchy. In the meantime, networks of resistance to the right have sprung up: the Women’s March on Washington found itself in solidarity with sister marches across the globe; people across Britain and the US wore safety pins to mark themselves as a resource for immigrants made newly vulnerable. Divided across the political spectrum, what these political happenings have in common is a belief in the plasticity of networks and the potential they have to create an alternative to the present.
Equally, developments in technology have enabled intimate surveillance of our everyday lives, increasing the potential for intrusion and violence, by both governments and corporations. Networks can be deeply conservative, restructuring academic and professional fields which are often rendered invisible in the process. Mechanisms of control, corporate or professional networks, and the norms/practices that constitute them, can ingrain societal exclusion and privilege.
Environmental crises, war and migration demonstrate how seemingly disparate processes are deeply networked and how both social, natural and technical systems are mutually constitutive. This highlights the need to be aware of the networked complexity of the world, and the entanglement of human and nonhuman phenomenon, which is crucial to make sense of the world in which we exist.

Excursions Journal are seeking abstracts of 250 – 300 words for a symposium due to take place at the University of Sussex on 27 September 2017, and journal articles of 3000-5000 words. We are interested in receiving submissions from a range of disciplines that engage with instances, contemporary and historic, where the networks we have established matter. This could include, but is not limited to:

  • How networks in our historical approaches help us to better understand our present moment, or reinterpret our narratives of the past
  • Representations of networked practices in art, literature and music
  • Spatialisation, architecture and place
  • Economic networks of production, distribution and/or exchange
  • Telecommunication, technology and surveillance, conspiracy, and in/visibility
  • How networks structure organisations and hierarchies, engaging with networks of power, politics, social mobility and privilege
  • How networks are embodied, and how networks create and construct feelings of belonging and/or isolation
  • Migration and borders in relation to local, national and international networks
  • The role networks play in constructing identity and identity politics, issues of race, gender and queer networks
  • The transmission of ideas and practices through networking
  • Academic networks and critiques of these, looking inward as well as outward, considering professional networking, and collaborative practice
  • Inclusion, access and discrimination in the public and/or private spheres
  • Use of complexity theory or speculative entropy to understand social and practical issues
  • Religion, intentional communities, protest networks and the project of humanity

The deadline for abstract submissions for the symposium is 31 July 2017, abstracts should be between 250 – 300 words, and include a short author bio (no more than 50 words). Please submit via enquiries@excursions-journal.org.uk

The deadline for journal submissions is 31 October 2017. Scholarly papers should be between 3,000 and 5,000 words and must follow Harvard style guidelines. We also encourage creative submissions in media such as film, photography, or audio. For creative submissions, please include an abstract and a brief biography (no more than 150 words) along with your submission. All enquiries should be directed to enquiries@excursions-journal.org.uk. To submit your work, register with us  here

Workshop 7th June: Time and Fear: The Proximity of Crisis and the Horrors of Repetition

T
Politics of Temporality Workshop

Time and Fear: The Proximity of Crisis and the Horrors of Repetition

Wednesday 7th June, University of Sussex Freeman Centre Room F40

Full Schedule and abstracts available here

To book a free place please email h.mcknight@sussex.ac.uk

10:00 – 10:15

Tea and Coffee

10:15 – 10:30

Introductions by Chair Dr Lucy Finchett-Maddock

10:30 – 11:45

Panel 1 – Techniques of Fear and Change

First as Tragedy, Then as Farce: The Slow Death of Social Democracy in the UK – Tom Frost, University of Sussex

A Fearful Symmetry? The Uses of and Responses to Fear by Leave and Remain Campaigners in the UK’s Referendum on EU Membership of June 2016 – Dr Nick Randell, Newcastle University

11:45 – 12:00

Break

12:00 – 13:15

Panel 2 – The Labour Party in its own Discourse

Inter-Generational Memory: The Labour Party and the Ghost of The Two Tonys – Daniel Lewis, University of York

The Spectre of Technological Revolution: Scientific Revolutions in Labours Old and New – Matthew Francis, University of Birmingham

13:15 – 14:15

Lunch

14:15– 15:45

Panel 3 – Radicalism and Resistance

H is for Heterotopia: Temporalities of the “new nature writing” – Dr Cathy Elliot, School of Public Policy University College London

Urban rhythms and the afterlives of conflict. Memory, affect and landscape in Derry/Londonderry (N. Ireland). – Garikoitz Gómez Alfaro, University of Brighton

A Heritage of New Terrorisms: The Chronotopology of Prevent Legislation in University Spaces – Heather McKnight, University of Sussex

15:45 – 16:30

Break

16:30 – 18:00

Book Launch: Emily Robinson, (2017) The language of progressive politics in modern Britain.

This book traces the word ‘progressive’ through modern British history, from the Enlightenment to Brexit. It explores the shifting meanings of this term and the contradictory political projects to which it has been attached. It also places this political language in its cultural context, asking how it relates to ideas about progressive social development, progressive business, and progressive rock music. 


‘Progressive’ is often associated with a centre-left political tradition, but this book shows that this was only ever one use of the term – and one that was heavily contested even from its inception. 


The power of the term ‘progressive’ is that it appears to anticipate the future. This can be politically and culturally valuable, but it is also dangerous. The suggestion that there is only one way forward has led to fear and doubt, anger and apathy, even amongst those who would like to consider themselves ‘progressive people’.

Emily Robinson is Senior Lecturer in Politics at the University of Sussex, UK, Commissioning Editor of Renewal, and a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society. Her previous work includes History, Heritage and Tradition in Contemporary British Politics: Past Politics and Present Histories(2012).

Location

Details of how to get to Sussex Campus are available here: http://www.sussex.ac.uk/about/directions

A campus map is available here, the event is taking place in the Freeman building , number 43 on this map.