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Call for Papers

Theme: Global South Conversations
Subtitle: Eco-Cosmopolitanism, Ethics of Proximity and
Anthropocentric Anxieties in the Time of Climate Change
Type: International Conference
Institution: Department of English, Jadavpur University
Location: Kolkata, West Bengal (India)
Date: 5.–6.3.2020
Deadline: 15.2.2020

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This conference envisions a conversation between scholars, activists,
writers and artists and local communities. We would, through the
proceedings of this conference, like to explore the range of concerns
and objectives that span the polarities of “eco-cosmopolitanism” and
the “ethics of proximity”, exploring varied critical responses to
complex geological and biological interactions and ecological
transformations in the Global South. According to the United Nations’
environmental risk index, a by-country report on the effects of
global climate change, the inhabitants, locales, and economies of
global south nations will be disproportionally affected as global
warming intensifies. Many of these nations are projected to be hit by
a three factors: rising populations, combined with already-vulnerable
economies and spikes in severe weather events will result in massive
disruptions to livelihoods and cultural practices, as well as mass
migrations as environmental refugees flee to more habitable areas.

In her seminal text Sense of Place, Sense of Planet: The
Environmental Imagination of the Global, Ursula K. Heise defines the
eco-cosmopolitan impulse as “environmental world citizenship” that
“attempt[s] to envisionindividuals and groups as part of planetary
“imagined communities” of both human and non-human kinds”. The thrust
of her work is aimed towards developing “a more nuanced understanding
of how both local cultural and ecological systems are imbricated in
global ones” (2008, 59). From the position of an environmental world
citizen it may become possible to incorporate within the known world
an unseen complexity of human and non-human systems.

However, as Heise understands, while the potential richness of the
eco-cosmopolitan worldview has the capacity to transcend the “ethic
of proximity”, “such a perspective needs to be attentive to the
political frameworks within which communities begin to see themselves
as part of a planetary community, and what power struggle such
visions might be designed to hide and legitimate.” It might even be
regarded as a utopian perspective given the reality of the power
wielded by global trade organizations, the ability of individual
purchase-power to nullify political and environmentalist initiatives
and the absence of a functioning global environmental regulation. The
lack of progress made more than two decades after the “Rio
Declaration on Environment and Development” (1992) substantiates the
skepticism of many environmentalist scholars and activists. There is
also the danger of eco-cosmopolitanism being co-opted by climate
capitalists to continue capitalist petro-industrial exploitation of
the environment.

At the same time grassroots environmentalism is frequently liable to
fail as the way it conceptualizes resistance to ‘development’ –
roads, power-plants, industries – is perceived as perpetuating the
impoverishment of ‘backward’/ ‘underdeveloped’ places. However,
grassroots environmentalism or as Ramchandra Guha terms it
“environmentalism of the poor” has flourished through the South, from
the Chipko Andolan of the Himalayan peasants to the struggle to
protect the Brazilian Amazon forests by Chico Mendes and the local
communities. While nation states and international bodies argue for
‘development’ at the cost of conservation, Guha points out that it is
environmental degradation that often intensifies economic deprivation
of the local communities whose lives and livelihood are inextricably
connected with the natural world. At the grassroot level concern for
the environment inevitably overlaps with concern for social justice.

We envisage this conference as a space for articulation of hesitation
and a moment for pause in our march for ‘development’, when we
examine such ideologies and responses as eco-cosmopolitanism and
ethics of proximity and analyze our anthropocentric anxieties about
our life-sustaining planet transforming into a space that is hostile
to the survival of humans and non-humans equally.

Potential topics may include, but are not limited to:

- Theoretical approaches to the depiction of climate change in the
  Global South
- Making a case for eco-cosmopolitanism
- Traditional and scientific knowledge of local ecosystems
- Whose forests are these? Analysing the human-non-human contact
- Nature fighting back: Representations of nonhuman agency
- Wetlands and mangrove forests
- Managing water resources
- Conservation of flora and fauna
- Nonhuman animals in narratives of environmental change
- Development and clean energy
- Sustainable living practices
- Representations of habitat loss
- Religion, rituals and the non-human world
- Women and conservation
- Ecology and indigenous art forms

Submissions & Deadlines

We invite abstracts of up to 400 words, together with a short bio (80
words, more or less), in a single .doc/ PDF file to be sent by email
to: rusa.lit...@gmail.com

All submissions will be read and adjudicated by an academic panel.

The closing date is 15th February 2020.

Selected abstracts will be notified by 20th February 2020.

Conveners:
Dr. Saswati Halder and Dr. Sutanuka Ghosh

Organized by a RUSA 2.0 Major Research Project "Literary Ecology in
19th Century Bengal"

For more queries, please contact Project Fellow Ankana Das at
9051411789 / ad.ankana...@gmail.com or Basundhara Chakraborty at
8902641798 / basundharachakrabor...@gmail.com.




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