For the third issue of Soapbox, a graduate peer-reviewed journal for
cultural analysis, we invite young researchers to submit abstracts that
critically engage with the theme of ‘contamination.’
Originating from the Latin contaminare “to touch together,” “corrupt,”
“defile,” contamination is commonly framed as the presence of an undesirable
element which effectively alters, spoils, harms, or destroys lifeforms, matter
or other entities. Beyond thinking in terms of disease or invasion, the scope
of globalised capitalist production affords us to consider that we live in a
state of ubiquitous contamination. From microplastics to heavy metals, and
radioactive compounds, the accumulation of strange molecules in the atmosphere,
waters, and land, contribute to climate change and the melting of permafrost –
potentially leading to the release of more greenhouse gases and millennia-old
pathogenic viruses. Yet, not only physical materialities are concerned but also
the immaterial and intangible, such as digital spam, moods, rumours, or
protestor’s demands can become viral. Like microbes and bacteria, computer
viruses are trespassers, pervasively moving around the world and seeking to
evade detection by filters and border controls.
While contamination assumes the possibility of non-contamination, Alexis
Shotwell argues that “we have never been pure” (2016). Neither, we could add,
have we ever been just human. As porous beings, the most part of our bodies
constitutes a multiplicity of bacteria, microbes, fungi, and added chemicals.
Thus, thinking that we are always already contaminated troubles notions of
purity, as well as the stigmatisation of contaminated bodies, objects, or
environments. Echoing Anna L. Tsing, without underestimating the real damage
caused by environmental pollution, epidemics, and nuclear waste: quarantine is
not an option. In her writing about the livelihoods of Matsutake mushrooms,
Tsing proposes the alternative approach of “contamination as collaboration”
(2015). She invites us to consider contamination and disturbance more
productively and openly, as “transformation through encounter,” implying that
“contaminated diversity is everywhere,” for better or worse.
For this issue, we encourage contributors to think contamination
differently from rigid conceptualisations and prefigured connotations, as a
concept that travels over neat categories, harbouring the potential of undoing
borders, stimulating even ‘dead’ matter with velocity, and linking together
supposedly separate and stagnant beings. This means attending to relationality
and difference, on every scale, from molecular frictions to planetary
movements. Along this line, contamination is about the in-betweenness, the
liminality of the ‘ish’, the ‘not quite this or that’ – the process found in
such entanglements. How, then, does thinking with contamination reconfigure
conditions of knowing and being? What is at stake, for actors (human and
nonhuman) and objects alike, in troubling our understanding of contamination? Who
gets to decide what is defined as ‘toxic’ or ‘impure’ and what is designated as
‘clean’?
We encourage submissions in the direction of, but not limited to, the
following topics:
- Contagious relationality in the form of crowds, mobs, protest, and state violence
- Nationalism, identity, colonialism, and questions of assimilation
- Uncontained, intrusive, and ‘abnormal’ subjects and subjectivity
- Infiltration and sabotage: contamination as a political subversive strategy
- Contamination and failure: corrupted files, collapsing (eco-)systems
- ‘Sublime’ landscapes: nuclear aesthetics, waste
- Immunity and sickness: epidemics, contagion, protection
- Contamination in a biopolitical regime: hygiene and sterility as normative forces
- Molecular unruliness: para-legal agency of bacteria, microbes, and spores
- Infectious bodies: porousness and permeability, devious sexuality, phantasies of infection
- Affect (for instance, noise and chaos theory) & emotions (for instance, contagious happiness, sadness, laughter)
- (Im-)purity: matters of the sacred and profane; nature/culture and similar dichotomies
- Spreading of language or communication practices
- Algorithmic or digital contamination (SPAM, computer viruses, crowdsourcing)
Please submit your abstract (maximum 300 words) by February 3 or already
written paper (3000 to 5000 words) by March 2 to
submissions@soapboxjournal.com. Feel free to contact us if you have any
questions.
Soapbox also welcomes short essays, book/film/exhibition reviews,
experimental writing and multi-media for our website, all-year-round – send
full drafts up to 1,500 words to submissions@soapboxjournal.com.
Please submit your abstract (max 300 words) to
submissions@soapboxjournal.com by February 3. The full papers (3000-5000 words)
are due March 2.
Please get in touch to pitch new ideas or existing projects for us to
feature there.
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