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Call for Papers

Theme: Ecologies
Subtitle: Relations of Culture, Matter, and Power
Type: 12th Annual Meeting
Institution: Cultural Studies Association (CSA)
   University of Utah
Location: Salt Lake City, UT (USA)
Date: 29.–31.5.2014
Deadline: 19.1.2014

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The Cultural Studies Association (CSA) invites proposals from its
current and future members for participation in its twelfth annual
meeting in Salt Lake City, Utah.

Everyone cares about the environment these days, but what does it
mean to speak of ecology? Network and systems theories suggest
complex approaches to questions of culture and ecology. Assemblage
theories explode stable conceptions of locality, sociality, and the
human. We speak of programming environments, learning environments,
media ecologies, organizational ecologies, digital ecologies,
ecologies of resistance, ecologies of play, flows of information,
nodal points of power, and open-source ecologies of collaboration and
collective action. We mobilize ecological discourse as a means of
understanding and challenging the material formations of power that
discipline raced, gendered, sexed, and classed bodies. These
discourses and processes create an ecology of meaning that informs
how we talk about and understand our environments.

The theme of the 2014 Cultural Studies Association meeting,
“Ecologies: Relations of Culture, Matter, and Power,” prompts
inquiries into how environmental factors and ecological discourses
shape conceptions of culture, matter, and power, and how these
factors and discourses are shaped by forces of history and
globalization. The theme also invites us to re-imagine the gathering
as an ecology in its own right: an assemblage of cultural critics and
producers. This year’s conference aims to provide spaces for the
cross-pollination of art, activism, pedagogy, design, and research by
bringing together participants from a variety of positions inside and
outside the university. While formal academic papers will be
accepted, we encourage contributors to experiment with alternative
formats that challenge traditional disciplinary formations or
exclusionary conceptions of the academic.

Proposals from all areas and on all topics of relevance to cultural
studies are welcome, but preference will be given to proposals that
critically and creatively engage this year's theme. Proposal topics
might include, but should not be limited to:

- The hybridization of ecology discourses: environmental activism,
  media ecology, organizational ecologies, social ecology, systems
  theories, spatial surveillance, etc.;
- The cultural ecology of textual production, consumption, and
  interpretation;
- Ecological perspectives on privatization, imperialism, racial
  hierarchies, global capitalism, etc.;
- Queer, indigenous, activist, anti-capitalist, transgender,
  postcolonial and/or materialist perspectives on ecology;
- Post-humanist, object-oriented, or actor-network ontologies,
  epistemologies, methodologies, and case studies;
- Interpretive possibilities raised by ecology and the challenge of
  cultural materialism;
- The “greening” of specific disciplines, fields and institutions,
  its implications, and its continued silences;
- Pedagogical reflections, institutional ecologies, and ecologies of
  learning;
- “Natural” disasters, privatization, waste, environmental
  inequality, and the displacement of industrialism;
- Ecological foundations or justifications for new forms of
  surveillance, management, and control;
- Collectives, nodes, networks, flows, vectors, circuits, and other
  models that de-center the autonomous individual;
- Proliferation of synergistic and ecological discourses as
  reactionary requirements of late capitalism;
- Sustainability and discourses of the future;
- Digital environments and built spaces;
- Invisible ecologies of information, discourse, and power;
- Bodily interactions with environmental elements (food, water, air,
  flows of energy);
- Food justice and the politics of ingestion;
- New modes of scholarship and activism that attempt to address
  questions of ecology;
- Analysis that reflects upon the context of its case study or
  studies;
- Any other topic relevant to the theme.

All sessions run for 90 minutes and will have access to basic
audiovisual equipment (projector, speakers, and internet connection).
Sessions that require additional space or technical equipment may
request reasonable accommodations from the organizing committee, but
accommodations are contingent upon the availability of resources and
equipment. Special requests should be included as a note in the body
of the initial submission. Additionally, please note that all session
organizers must be CSA members for the 2014 calendar year at the time
of submission.

As at past CSA conferences, we welcome proposals from a range of
disciplinary and topical positions, including literature, history,
sociology, geography, politics, anthropology, communication(s),
popular culture, cultural theory, queer studies, critical race
studies, feminist studies, post-colonial studies, legal studies,
science studies, media and film studies, material cultural studies,
platform studies, visual art and performance studies. We particularly
encourage submissions from individuals working beyond the boundaries
of the university: artists, activists, independent scholars,
professionals, community organizers, or K-12 and community college
educators.

This year’s conference is hosted by the University of Utah in Salt
Lake City. Located on a beautiful 1,534 acre campus two miles east of
downtown Salt Lake City, the University of Utah has been nationally
recognized for its sustainability efforts, which include the
installation of solar ivy panels and a commitment to renewable
energy. The University currently houses the J. Willard Marriott
Library, the Jon M. Huntsman Center, the Utah Museum of Natural
History, the Utah Museum of Fine Arts and Red Butte Garden and
Arboretum, and was one of the original four ARPANET nodes. Recently
named by The Advocate as the gayest city in America, Salt Lake City
is home to the Sundance Film Festival, Utah Symphony and Opera, The
Leonardo, Capitol Theatre, Temple Square, Clark Planetarium, the
Mormon Tabernacle Choir, Utah Museum of Contemporary Art, Olympic
Cauldron Park, and a vibrant local art and music scene.

Submission Deadline and Process

All proposals should be submitted through the CSA online system,
available at: CulturalStudiesAssociation.org. Submission of proposals
is limited to current CSA members. See the benefits of membership and
become a member at: CulturalStudiesAssociation.org.

The submission system will be open in November, 2013. Please prepare
all the materials required to propose your session according to the
given directions before you begin electronic submission.

Notification of acceptance will be given in February of 2014.

Key Dates

Open for Submissions: November 2013 - 19 January 2014
Notification of Acceptance: February 2014
Early Conference Registration: 1 February 2014-18 April 2014
Deadline for Inclusion in the Conference Program: 14 May 2014


Contact:

Robert W. Gehl
Department of Communication
University of Utah
Language and Communication Building, Room 2515
255, Central Campus Drive
Salt Lake City, UT 84112
USA
Email: r...@robertwgehl.org
Web: http://www.culturalstudiesassociation.org




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