| |||||||||||||
WSQ, Spring 2016 : WSQ Special Issue: SURVIVAL | |||||||||||||
Link: http://www.feministpress.org/wsq/current-call-papers | |||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||
Call For Papers | |||||||||||||
WSQ Survival Issue [Due March 1, 2015]
(WSQ at the Feminist Press) Contact Email: WSQSurvivalIssue@gmail.com Call for Papers, Poetry and Prose WSQ Special Issue Spring 2016: Survival Guest Editors: Frances Bartowski, Elena Glasberg, and Taylor Black To survive is messy, elaborate, layered. The metaphysics of deferral are entwined in the root and the prefix sur (over) vive (life): to live beyond. Survival conjures hills alive with survivalists, such misconstrued terms as “survival of the fittest,” the defiance reflected in Gloria Gaynor’s 1980s disco anthem “I Will Survive,” as well as states of being “a survivor” of incest, war, or rape. Survival’s topicality extends beyond controversies around life/death expectancy, planned life termination, as well as the continuing fascination of suicide and now ecocide. Posing “Survival” invites the question: What didn’t survive? As life (or living) is a strategic, representable mode of survival over time, the biopolitics of control and management have made both politics and representation always already invested in surviving and in survival. As Jacques Derrida (1995) has made explicit, the archive (of the past) relies for its value, or its survivability, on a promised futurity. Lee Edelmen’s No Future (2004) is a frustrated calling out of the biopolitics of normalization under edicts to live, to be healthy, to reproduce (a future). Sarah Lochlan-Jain’s concept of “prognosis time” (“Cancer Butch” 2007) reveals the anxious disciplining of those living with cancer (or with certain disabilities or age that places them in a zone of limited survivability) through the enforcement of a future as strictly coterminus with survival. What happens when survival is no longer suppressed or assumed, taken as inevitable or as the condition of possibility of both temporality and disciplinary knowledge, or periodization? Much of survival’s force and promise stems from its unpredictable attachments across the biological and social sciences, where it long ago escaped the box of mechanism to become a metaphor. Orphaned traditions are survivals of bygone cultures. Legal regimes sometimes remain in force beyond the period of their initiating circumstances; the Antarctic Treaty, for example, is a Cold War survival. Survival signifies as actuarial differential in Ruth Wilson-Gilmore’s work on racialized survival within the US prison system (2007), or what Lauren Berlant has named “slow death” (2007); it is revived in controversy around medical practices, most obviously with organ transplants, but also on the level of the cellular, as in The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks (2010), about the exploitation of a North Carolina woman’s cellular property after her death from cancer. Jodi Byrd in Transit of Empire (2011) offers “Survivance” as a counter to the notion of a serviceable Native disappearance as it continues to limit Native sovereignty under various regimes of settler occupation. Elizabeth Grosz (2011) revives the disruptive potential of female-driven sexual selection as an aesthetic, willful, irrational force—an anthropogenic factor not necessarily coordinate with environmental management as an untrustworthy guarantor of human survival. We invite submissions that explore classic, contemporary and subterranean feminist texts that think through the politics of surviving and explore untimely ethics of survival. In the introduction for this issue, we revisit Valerie Solanas’s classic SCUM Manifesto (1967). Although hardly in need of rediscovery, SCUM Manifesto has not been understood for its hilarious invocation of a specifically biological rationale for the r/evolutionary (and environmentally salutary) extinction of the male sex. Its language of male mutation and its invitation to enlightened men to “relax” and enjoy the ride to their “demise” casts the war of the sexes as inevitable. Solanas’s radical vision of feminist essentialism presents the extinction of man as an apocalyptic rendering of the near future. Her commitment to the death of all men invites a range of response across disciplines, media, and time frames and represents the contrary spirit supporting this present feminist meditation on survival. Topics and themes we are interested in exploring include but are not limited to: R/evolution: Evolution, Capital, and Neo-Darwinism Ethics of suicide and gender Un/natural Selection Ecocide, death drive as slow death Cancer and Women, Feminist Cancer Journals Ecology and intuition Extinction as Survival through the other end of the telescope Biopolitics and Population Management Indigeneity and Sovereignty in the Anthropocene Reproduction: sexual, viral, and social Environmental Management's unintended effects The Feminist “Anthropo/s/cene” The Feminist Untimely The art of Survival Survivalism and gender Environmentalism and unequal sacrifice Apocalypse, climate and otherwise Legal vestiges, protectionism’s afterlives Holdouts and forgotten remains/relics Precarity, disease, women The violence of the social production of gender/sexuality Genetic property and feminized “body” parts Feminist generations/genealogies Living fossils Sleeping Beauties, Old Boys, and Rip Van Winkles Utopias, feminist or otherwise Aging Feminism, Old Feminists Contemporary Plagues: Cancer, HIV/AIDS, Ebola Epidemics/Pandemics Hauntology Genetics, species, and gender essentialism Environmental management as Disaster/ Capitalism Scholarly articles and inquiries should be sent to guest issue editors Frances Bartowski, Elena Glasberg, and Taylor Black at WSQsurvivalissue [at] gmail.com. We will give priority consideration to submissions received by March 1, 2015. Please send complete articles, not abstracts. Submissions should not exceed 6,000 words (including un-embedded notes and works cited) and should comply with the formatting guidelines at http://www.feministpress.org/wsq/submission-guidelines. Poetry submissions should be sent to WSQ's poetry editor, Kathleen Ossip, at WSQpoetry [at] gmail.com by March 1, 2015. Please review previous issues of WSQ to see what type of submissions we prefer before submitting poems. Please note that poetry submissions may be held for six months or longer. Simultaneous submissions are acceptable if the poetry editor is notified immediately of acceptance elsewhere. We do not accept work that has been previously published. Please paste poetry submissions into the body of the e-mail along with all contact information. Fiction, essay, and memoir submissions should be sent to WSQ's fiction/nonfiction editor, Asali Solomon, at WSQCreativeProse [at] gmail.com by March 1, 2015. Please review previous issues of WSQ to see what type of submissions we prefer before submitting prose. Please note that prose submissions may be held for six months or longer. Simultaneous submissions are acceptable if the prose editor is notified immediately of acceptance elsewhere. We do not accept work that has been previously published. Please provide all contact information in the body of the e-mail. cfp categories: african-american american bibliography_and_history_of_the_book childrens_literature classical_studies cultural_studies_and_historical_approaches ecocriticism_and_environmental_studies eighteenth_century ethnicity_and_national_identity film_and_television gender_studies_and_sexuality general_announcements humanities_computing_and_the_internet interdisciplinary journals_and_collections_of_essays medieval modernist studies poetry popular_culture postcolonial religion renaissance rhetoric_and_composition romantic science_and_culture theatre theory travel_writing twentieth_century_and_beyond victorian |
|