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From:
Jennifer Bean <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Film and TV Studies Discussion List <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Mon, 20 Jan 2020 00:54:37 +0000
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Dear Screen-L,

I would appreciate your circulating the below CFP on Screen-L, and invite you to write me with questions should any arise.

with my best,
Jennifer



JENNIFER M. BEAN
Robert Jolin Osborne Associate Professor of Cinema and Media Studies

Associate Chair, Dept. of Cinema & Media Studies

Box 354338
University of Washington

Seattle, WA 98195-4338


Editor-in-Chief, Feminist Media Historie<http://fmh.ucpress.edu/>s



________________________________
From: Feminist Media Histories <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Sunday, January 19, 2020 4:31 PM
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Subject: Feminist Media Histories - CFP :: Precarious Mobilities

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CALL FOR PAPERS

Precarious Mobilities
Guest Editors:
Paula J. Massood and Pamela Robertson Wojcik

Mobility is a pliant term: its meanings vary dramatically, depending upon how one defines place, stability, and fixity. Media historians of the early 20th century often associate mobility with modernist tropes, such as train travel, tourism, or the aimless strolling of the flaneur/flaneuse. Media studies of the early 21st century often associate mobility with the promise of digital technologies, such as the disembodied jouissance of cyberspace or virtual travel. At their core, these forms of mobility presume freedom of movement: geographically, economically, personally (via definition and redefinition). In opposition to the association between freedom and mobility as enriching are those more constrained modes of mobility, often involuntary or forced—refugees, exiles, vagabonds, nomads, gypsies, the displaced, the relocated/colonized, and/or the trafficked. For the former, where mobility is a choice, fixity often seems rooted, static, and bounded. For the latter, fixity becomes an ideal or a privilege, seen as grounding and secure: mobility, in this sense, is aligned with rootlessness and placelessness.

Of course, neither the freedom to be mobile nor the ability to be rooted is ever accorded equally. Many forms of mobility stem from privilege; for example, when movement is a matter of choice. Other forms stem from precarity and powerlessness, as when movement is forced (either physically or psychically) through political, economic, or social upheaval. And there are forms of undesirable rootedness that occur when mobility is denied by, for example, economics, the police state (imprisonment), or segregation/displacement based on gender, race, ethnicity, generation, ability, etc. Indeed, we can think of mobility as defined not only in terms of freedom vs. rootlessness but also as privilege vs. precarity.

This special issue of Feminist Media Histories seeks proposals on feminist, intersectional approaches to precarious mobilities. We are interested in papers that not only consider representations of itineracy, but that also consider mobility and precarity in terms of women’s, queer and trans media makers’ labor. We seek papers that address this topic in different media, in different historical periods, and different global contexts. Along with traditional scholarly essays, we are open to proposals for videographic criticism, photo essays, translations, and other critical formats.

Proposals might consider the following questions: What kinds of mobility are available to whom? What are genres of precarity and when do they occur? What enables and what delimits digital or virtual mobility? How and when does mobility entail failure, and when is it a successful detour or swerve? What generational shifts have there been in the kinds of mobility available, or in what counts as itineracy? How do the stakes of gendered, raced, and/or queer movement through space change if the geography is urban, suburban, or rural? When is domestic, natural or colonized space not aligned with rootedness but with precarity or placelessness? How might employment and mobility be linked either literally or figuratively? What happens when placelessness does not lead to mobility but instead leads to endangerment, instability, or even petrification?

Topics might include:


  *   Aesthetics of mobility and placelessness
  *   Migration of people and/or media technologies and platforms
  *   Implications of (home)land for indigenous and diasporic peoples
  *   Precarity of the planet, eco-systems, species-relations; resource extraction and effects on mobility/immobility
  *   Figures such as exiles, refugees, nomads, hitchhikers, vagabonds, the tramp, the fallen woman, the prostitute, the homeless, and others
  *   Auteurs of precarity and mobility, such as Kelly Reichardt, Tsai Ming-Liang, etc.
  *   Celebrities associated with mobility, precarity such as Malala Yousafzai, Josephine Baker, etc.
  *   Guerilla filmmaking/media making
  *   Rejections of home or ejections from home
  *   Abolition, escape or emancipation/incarceration
  *   Military deployments or leaves
  *   Dystopic imaginings of placelessness
  *   Narratives of squatting, crashing, couch surfing, off-grid living
  *   Gendered and racialized mobility and generational differences

Contributions can be sent to guest editors either Paula J. Massood ([log in to unmask]<mailto:[log in to unmask]>) or Pamela Robertson Wojcik ([log in to unmask]<mailto:[log in to unmask]>).

Proposals should be roughly 300 words, should include a short bio, and should be submitted no later than March 1, 2020 to either of the email addresses above.

Article drafts will be due by August 1, 2020
and will then be sent out for anonymous peer review.

Feminist Media Histories is a scholarly journal devoted to feminist histories of film, video, audio, and digital technologies across a range of periods and global contexts. Inter-medial and trans-national in approach, Feminist Media Histories examines the historical role gender has played in varied media technologies, and documents women's engagement with these media as audiences and users, creators and executives, critics and theorists, technicians and laborers, educators and activists.
Feminist Media Histories is published quarterly by the University of California Press.
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