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Call for Publications

Theme: Neo-Nationalism and Usable Pasts
Publication: Postcolonial Interventions: An Interdisciplinary Journal
of Postcolonial Studies
Date: Vol. 2, Issue 1 (January 2017)
Deadline: 30.10.2016

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A few years ago, Stephen Greenblatt had noted,

“In the latter half of the twentieth century many in the social
sciences and humanities gleefully proclaimed the demise of a set of
traditional assumptions about cultural identity. Notions of
wholeness, teleological development, evolutionary progress, and
ethnic authenticity were said to have been dismantled forever. A few
lamented their passing, but most scholars energetically grappled with
brave new theories of hybridity, network theory, and the complex
“flows” of people, goods, money, and information across endlessly
shifting social landscapes. But as the new century unfolds, it has
become increasingly clear that the bodies of the deceased have
refused to stay buried: those who thought to have bid farewell once
and for all to the heavily guarded borders of the nation-state and to
the atavistic passions of religious and ethnic identity find
themselves confronting a global political landscape in which neither
nationalism nor identity politics shows any intention of
disappearing” (Cultural Mobility 1-2).

While on the one hand recessions and the Syrian migrant crisis have
given further fillip to the growth of right-wing neo-nationalist
politics across Europe and the United States, evident from Brexit and
other similar political phenomena, in various countries of Asia and
Africa there continues to be an alarming growth of religious
fundamentalism and associated violence as well as the rise of
atavistic visions of nationalist politics. All of this creates a
turbulent cauldron of racist prejudice and colonial stereotypes,
growth of terrorist modules, increasing violence against women and a
menacing insistence on compulsive homogeneity which keeps threatening
ethnic/religious minorities in one way or another. J.K. Rowling, in
acknowledgment of this crisis has recently remarked:

Every nationalist will tell you that their nationalism is different,
a natural, benign response to their country's own particular needs
and challenges, nothing to do with that nationalism of yore that
ended up killing people, yet every academic study of nationalism has
revealed the same key features. Your country is the greatest in the
world, the nationalist cries, and anyone who isn't chanting that is a
traitor! Drape yourself in the flag: doesn't that make you feel
bigger and more powerful? Finding the present scary? We've got a
golden past to sell you, a mythical age that will dawn again once
we've got rid of the Mexicans/left the EU/annexed Ukraine! Now place
your trust in our simplistic slogans and enjoy your rage against the
Other! (“On Monsters, Villains and the EU Referendum”)

In contrast, across the world we also keep witnessing an excavation
and assemblage of what Tad Tuleja calls ‘usable pasts’ which in many
ways serve to discursively and performatively resist the surging
currents of religious fundamentalism and neo-nationalist
belligerence. Such usable pasts belong as much as to majority
communities and ruling elites as they do to ethnic minorities and
politically powerless groups. They often serve to emphasise notions
of plurality and amity as well as resistant solidarities which
contemporary reality either ignores or grotesquely contradicts. Yet
such usable pasts continue to prefigure fruitful possibilities for
refashioning the nation space and forging such paradigms of identity
that nurture inclusive channels of belongingness and cohesion.

Vol. II, Issue 1 of Postcolonial Interventions would focus on all
such issues and more by exploring both the threat of religious
fundamentalism and neo-nationalism and the potentialities of usable
pasts in the constructions of selfhood and communities. Topics may
include but are not limited to:

- Being migrants in the face of rising neonationalism
- Race and gender in neonationalist discourse
- Islamophobia and the rise of the far-right
- ISIS and its impact
- Peripheral visions of inclusion and harmony
- Nation in the eyes of aborigines and ethnic minorities
- Traditions of syncretic religiosity/heterogeneous nationality
- Women’s negotiation with religious fundamentalism
- Revisiting instances of international solidarity
- Censorship and repression by neonationalist/fundamentalist forces

Submissions should be sent to the postcolonialinterventi...@gmail.com
by 30th October, 2016.

Submissions Guidelines:

1. Articles must be original and unpublished. Submission will imply
   that it is not being considered for publication elsewhere.
2. Written in Times New Roman 12, double spaced with 1″ margin on all
   sides.
3. Between 4000-7000 words, inclusive of all citations.
4. With parenthetic citations and a Works Cited list complying with
   MLA format.
5. Without footnotes; endnotes only if absolutely unavoidable.
6. A separate cover page should include the author’s name,
   designation and an abstract of 250 words with a maximum of 5
   keywords.
7. The main article should not in any way contain the author’s name.
   Otherwise the article will not be considered.
8. The contributors are responsible for obtaining permission to
   reproduce any material, including photographs and illustrations for
   which they do not hold copyright.


Contact:

Postcolonial Interventions
An Interdisciplinary Journal of Postcolonial Studies
Email: postcolonialinterventi...@gmail.com
Web: https://postcolonialinterventions.com




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