The
post-millennium world has seen a rapid escalation of violent conflicts in the
Middle East, West, Central and some areas of Southern Africa, and ongoing civil
wars, refugee migrations on unprecedented scales and human rights abuses in a
variety of other regions across the world. As a means to engage these
developments, Critical Arts instituted a new Section, “Under Fire” in 2002. This
is in keeping with its interpretation of cultural studies as a form of praxis,
of experience, and of strategic intervention, in which individuals find
themselves caught up in broader process over which they may have little or no
control. The aim of this section is to invite short (anything up to 2000 words)
theorised autobiographies, authoethnographies, and dramatic narratives of what
it is like living under fire, of the relevance of cultural studies in such
circumstances, and how it could be deployed to challenge such conditions. The
original Call emanated from a number of unsolicited submissions we had been
receiving from colleagues in Palestine and Zimbabwe, letters from friends in
Israel, and marginalised groups in South Africa, and from academics whose
research and work is pilloried by hostile authorities. The exigencies of being
under fire make it hard to find the discursive space in which participants can
catch enough breath to speak the truths of their own participation:
- When does a culture of resistance lose focus, becoming a culture of violence as an end in itself?
- At what point can one recognize when legitimate defence against violence has suddenly become indistinguishable from the Warsaw Ghetto?
- How can we turn war-talk into justice-talk, without provoking war-mongers to renewed efforts?
- In a world with a global view of even the most local eruption of violence, how can those under fire on opposite sides of the street, the valley, the river, the sand dune find enough space to escape the solidarities of occupation, of resistance, and develop a language of restitution, restoration, Reformation, in the face of corporate and state reaction?
- Closer to our own sites of research, when does academic managerialism and bureaucratisation of research become offensive, anti-humanist and self-destructive? The academic enterprise is under fire itself, as are many employed within it.
“Under
Fire” offers such a space, and we do not expect to define what will make
submissions acceptable or not. The object is for those who have had enough, to
speak in the ways they believe those across the camp or the corridormight
attend to them. The “Under Fire” submissions should reflect not just the
pressures of a personal involvement within a context of oppression, occupation,
or resistance; it should carry a clear indication of just how this involvement
tests the cultural studies tradition. In this “test” the writers’ experience
candraw not only on the cultural studies method of examining texts in relation
to contexts, but should also use the writer’s own context as the critical
touchstone for pushing the cultural studies envelope.
Submission
Guidelines:
Submissions
should be made online via ScholarOne Manuscripts (in cases where internet connectivity is
not conducive to a ScholarOne submission, we will still accept manuscripts
submitted via email to the Critical Arts office. Send to David Nothling at
criticalarts@ukzn.ac.za and/or editor-in-chief, Keyan Tomaselli, at
tomasell@ukzn.ac.za). Submissions should be original works not simultaneously
submitted elsewhere, if up to 2000 words in length including any references.
Referencing should be done according to the Chicago manual of style (see
attachment).
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