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Call for Publications

Theme: Polylogues at the intersection(s) of decolonisation,
conviviality and 'critical diversity' literacy
Subtitle: (Re-)imagining a 'good life'
Publication: Short Articles Series
Date: August 2022
Deadline: 31.5.2022

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The Oxfam Inequality Report is a yearly reminder of the pervasiveness
and depth of embedded injustices and inequalities in our daily lives.
Colonial trajectories continue to shape contemporary tendencies to
universalise the constitutive elements of a ‘good life’, encapsulated
in global goals such as the SDGs. The resultant erasure denies other
social and political imaginaries, other ways of knowing and
understanding the world; as the Zapatista say, ‘a world of many
worlds’, wherein we collectively create pluriversal spaces to
flourish.

Conviviality provides one frame to collectively live and flourish in
mutual respect with human and non-human environments. If we turn the
pages of any dictionary, we see that the term ‘conviviality’ means
friendliness. This might include ‘being helpful’, ‘being
accommodative’, ‘being supportive’ and ‘sharing and caring,’. In a
similar way, the term ‘diversity’ also generally refers to  practices
of de-hierarchization, pluralizing and collective endeavour in
producing knowledges. Critical diversity literacy (CDL) provokes us
to interrogate dominant methodologies of knowledge production. Taken
together, commitments to create and contribute to spaces for diverse
and convivial thinking must mean challenging dichotomous, polarised
and/or binary representations (e.g., men/women; North/South;
rich/poor) and work towards conditions that enable all forms of life
on this planet to lead a ‘good life’.

In practice, however, the theoretical ideals of conviviality and
diversity are underfed with varied forms of social, cultural,
political, racial, gender, economic and other forms of hierarchies
turning them into a mere narrative at constant risk of co-optation.
The phenomena of accommodativeness, friendliness, and support are
dictated by specific frameworks of (neo)colonial power dynamics,
which celebrate certain individuals, communities, ideologies, and
societies at the cost of dehumanizing others. Such phenomena rarely
address the power relations that mark some as disadvantaged and
others as privileged. The logic of modernity underpins these divides,
securitising borders, grabbing land, extracting natural resources and
patronising the ‘other’ with tied aid, undertaken in the name of a
monolithic ‘global development’ project.  The standardization of
these policies, practices and forms of knowledge production has
resulted in myopic view of what it means to BE. The very essence of
being and knowing has been reduced to a certain way of living; hence
an investigation into the alternatives is not only imperative but
also essential to get out of the binaries and build possible futures
that may be dormant, but may not yet be impossible. This call for
papers is an initiative to unthink the well-thought, and rethink the
unthought modes of existing, knowing, doing and communicating.

This series of short articles sets out to explore how the strategies
and tools of conviviality and critical diversity literacy converge
and diverge, how they might learn from each other, and how the
resultant ‘polylogue’ might contribute to the discourse and practice
of ‘decolonisation’. The articles will seek to identify what it means
to be ‘in-between’ conviviality and CDL. What are the benefits and
dangers of labelling schools of theorizing if we want to derive
actions for social justice from it?

This radical article series is a collaborative project between the
Convivial Thinking Collective (www.convivialthinking.org/) and Wits
Centre for Critical Diversity Studies (www.wits.ac.za/wicds/). The
central purpose of this project is to open up alternative,
depolarized plural spaces of knowledge dissemination, publication and
dialogue that lie outside formalized institutionalized spaces. In
order to continue with the dialogues in the future, the editors will
invite the selected contributors to convert the short articles into
full-fledged journal articles (5000-8000 words) with the
International Journal of Critical Diversity Studies (Published by
Pluto Press: www.plutojournals.com/ijcds/). Selected articles will
also be considered to be a part of papers presented during the WiCDS
annual conference in a work in progress plenary panel.

Language and pitching level

We encourage articles with academic or conversational language,
including poetry and prose. Where possible, citations should be made
through hyperlinks. We welcome submissions from contributors with any
kind of institutional affiliation – or none at all.

For now, this call requires articles between 1500-2000 words that may
address, though are not limited to, the following themes:

- What are the requirements of a ‘good life’ for all? How might
  concepts of conviviality and critical diversity help imagine these?
- Can conviviality and critical diversity be imagined as decolonial
  strategies?
- How do conviviality and critical diversity contribute to diverse
  ways of knowing and imagining a world of many worlds? This might
  include addressing questions such as:
- How does Critical gender studies unpack the necessity of queerness
  as a usual and normalized way of habitual existence?
- How can conviviality and critical diversity be practiced through
  the culture of culinary epistemologies?
- How do Science and Technology Studies preserve and practice racism
  and the Global North-Global South hierarchy? What are the
  possibilities of overcoming them?
- What are the ways in which we can develop and practice pedagogy and
  curriculum with respect to the phenomena of conviviality, and
  critical diversity literacy?
- How do conviviality and critical diversity invite us to acknowledge
  and celebrate in-betweenness and the deconstruction of binaries in
  our daily life?

Timelines: 

Submission of short articles (1500-1800 words): 31st May 2022

Notification of review outcome: 30 July 2022

Publication timeline: The selected articles will be published
sequentially from the first Sunday of August 2022 in the Rai section
of www.convivialthinking.org.

Regarding the publication of selected articles with the International
Journal of Critical Diversity Studies, the editors will get in touch
with the authors in January 2023.

For any query please do not hesitate to get in touch with Kudzaiishe
Vanyoro and Sayan Dey:
kudzaiishe.vany...@wits.ac.za – sayan....@wits.ac.za




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