The purpose of this special issue of Itinerari would be to tackle the
interrelation of Climate, Conflict and Migration, and the ways their pertaining
ecological, political, and ethical complexities are construed and circulated
via various cultural practices and ways of symbolization.
In the light of the recent challenges and controversies migration
policies has been facing in the US, UK and the EU, and the current
administrations’ ambiguous attitudes towards the role environmental factors
play in the proliferation of conflict and, consequently, migration, addressing
the relation between these global factors is an urgent and topical issue.
Migration has become a key player in the recent radicalization of global
politics, and has frequently been construed via media outlets as well as in
political discourse as a threat to national security and to perceived cultural
values, or as it is frequently referred to in Western political parlance, ‘our
way of life’. From Huntington’s highly
controversial Clash of Civilizations (1996) to Derrida’s concept of
‘hostipitality’ (2000) to Zizek’s ideas about the militarization of society
(2015) to Thomas Nail’s most recent Theory of the Border (2016), migration has
been mobilized both as political capital as well as a new critical idiom that
thematizes discourses on how we understand human subjectivity, and the ways we
negotiate historical and cultural legacy.
As Abel et al. observe, a growing
number of media reports suggest a correlation between climate change, violent
conflicts in the Middle East, and forced migration (2019). At the same time,
recent tendencies towards the radicalization of world politics and the
emergence of populist agendas (in the US, the UK as well as in a number of EU
countries) also necessitate a radical rethinking of issues ranging from
politics of inclusion to social mobility to climate justice and violent borders
(cf. Sheller 2018, Mann and Wainwright 2017, Jones 2017).
The correlation between conflict and migration has been in the focus of
attention in critical discourses on global politics of crisis, economic theory,
social geography, research on global security, and over the past years it
established itself as one of the pivotal agendas to pursue in Anthropocene
research too. Various disciplines offered insights into the multiple possible
ways these factors are connected to one another, yet the order of causality and
the nature of this relation remains unexplained.
The purpose of this project is to bridge the gap between current
political discourses and pertaining scholarly takes on the construction and
circulation of cultural ideas about the multi-faceted relations between
conflict, climate, and migration. Our primary focus will fall on
conceptualizations across various platforms of the cultural spectrum that map
out the ways the relations between these factors are perceived and engaged
with. The project lays special emphasis on the ways we negotiate awareness and
agency in relation to media representations of migrants and migrations into and
out of specific geographic locations. This thematic issue aims at bringing together
approaches that move between and across political geography, migration studies,
philosophy and ethics, political theory, violence, comparative literary and
media studies, eco-criticism and climate studies, cultural ecology, theories of
subjectivity and otherness.
Possible angles of approach will include but are by no means restricted
to documentary realism (films for action); fiction (literary and moving image
media from feature films, to television to video games); social media (with
particular emphasis on Twitter and Instagram); political discourses, colonial
theory, ethics and hospitality, climate studies, war studies, etc. We seek to
focus on cultural narratives of the visibility as well as the invisibility (in
fiction, art, media and critical discourse) of scarcity, changed ecological
circumstances, practices of exclusion, systemic violence etc., and other forms
of social and cultural anxieties related to conflict, climate and migration.
Authors interested in presenting their contribution to this theme can
submit it to the address: rivistaitinerari@gmail.com
The paper must not contain the Author’s name or any reference to the
Author in the metadata.
The paper must contain an abstract in English reviewed by an English
native speaker, not exceeding 250 words. The paper will be a file (pdf or doc)
to be attached during submission. It must not exceed 5.500 words (spaces and
footnotes included) and must be written in English.
Deadline: April 30, 2020.
Any elements of the file that might identify the Author must be removed
in order to guarantee anonymity during the referee process.
The contributions will be forwarded to one or more independent reviewers
for the blind refereeing process. Reviewers may anonymously ask authors to
modify or improve their contribution.
Notification of acceptance, conditional acceptance, rejection
The editorial staff will give notification of the refereeing outcome via
email.
Editors
David L. Palatinus (University of Ruzomberok)
Stefania Achella (University of Chieti-Pescara)
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario