According to the UNHCR's most recent, available data,[1] there are
currently 70.8 million people around the world who have been forced from their
homes. Of these, 25.9 million are refugees, over half of whom are under 18
years old. Thirty people per minute are forcibly displaced. At the same time,
climate change is rapidly intensifying; rising sea levels, extreme weather, and
natural catastrophes are slowly but surely becoming the norm. According to a
2018 special report by UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change,[2] the
world has 11 years left to keep global warming to a maximum of 1.5 degrees
Celsius by curbing carbon emission by at least 45 percent (25 percent higher
than current standards). The alternative increase of 2 degrees or higher would
be disastrous for agricultural communities, biodiversity and societal
infrastructures across the globe.
It is clear that these crises affect one another. As the world around us
changes both physically and ideologically, it grows ever more urgent to
consider the human relationship to landscapes and how our actions,
perspectives, and interventions affect and shape them. Within the interrelated
discourses on climate, politics, and migratory spaces, the term “landscape” can
have a variety of implications beyond the conventional connotation of fixed
outdoor environment. Rather than affirm ‘natural,’ immutable characteristics,
“landscape” can reflect the changing assemblage of geographical, physical, and
imaginary entities.
For instance, Georg Simmel intuits that to perceive a
particular landscape is a creative and constitutive act that actualizes a
viewer’s subjective expression. Alternatively, “landscape” can take on a
metaphorical dimension to describe the composition of a group or set of
practices such as cultural landscapes, media landscapes, and, for our purposes,
migration landscapes.
In this issue of TRANSIT, we hope to address the following questions:
How do different understandings of landscape interact and in turn shape each
other? How might a landscape of migration affect and/or overlap with an
ecological landscape? How does one represent changes in the environment, especially
in light of the unprecedented magnitude, speed and intricacy of transnational
movement and global-environmental transformation? How can we strive to make
patterns of migration more intelligible and what are the limits of that
intelligibility? What sort of ethical considerations are necessary in framing
mobility and the environment with both images and words?
TRANSIT invites reflections on German Studies as an academic field in
light of these questions. What are the implications for German Studies in analyzing
global phenomena that call into question the very idea of national borders? How
do concepts of nation persist or dissolve in the wake of so-called “refugee
crises” or climate change? How do linguistic and cultural evolutions challenge
or nuance conventional understandings of national arts and literatures?
This CFP encourages contributions from a wide range of related
disciplines including but not limited to literary studies, language pedagogy,
history, linguistics, film and media studies, performance studies, geography,
philosophy, translation, critical theory, and anthropology.
English- or German-language papers or projects are due for editorial
review by September 1st, 2019. transitjournal@berkeley.edu, CC
misandberg@berkeley.edu (Michael Sandberg, Managing Editor). For additional
information on submission guidelines, please click here. For a PDF-copy of the
current call for papers, please click here. For TRANSIT's latest issue
(Landscapes of Migration 12.1), please click here.
[1] “Figures at a Glance.” (2019, June). Retrieved from
https://www.unhcr.org/figures-at-a-glance.html. Accessed June 25th, 2019.
[2] IPCC, 2018: Summary for Policymakers. In: Global warming of 1.5°C.
An IPCC Special Report on the impacts of global warming of 1.5°C above pre-industrial
levels and related global greenhouse gas emission pathways, in the context of
strengthening the global response to the threat of climate change, sustainable
development, and efforts to eradicate poverty [V. Masson-Delmotte, P. Zhai, H. O. Pörtner, D.
Roberts, J. Skea, P. R. Shukla, A.
Pirani, W. Moufouma-Okia, C. Péan, R. Pidcock, S. Connors, J. B. R. Matthews,
Y. Chen, X. Zhou, M. I. Gomis, E. Lonnoy, T. Maycock, M. Tignor, T. Waterfield
(eds.)]. World Meteorological Organization, Geneva, Switzerland, 32 pp.
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario