Call for papers

"New Imperialisms"
Radical History Review


Radical History Review invites submissions for a forthcoming
thematic issue on New Imperialisms. A generation ago the New
Imperialism referred to the Age of Empire between the 1870s
and the outbreak of the First World War in 1914. Reflecting
the changes of recent years, the New in our title refers to
both the question of empire in our own times and to the new
critical and heuristic perspectives on imperialism, imperial
encounters, and imperial identities of the past.

Among the possible ways of construing New Imperialism is,
first, the post-Cold War, post-9/11 New World Order in which
a single world power attempts to dictate the terms to a
perceived global transnational space. Is this the age of the
American empire? Second, the impact of these developments
may suggest a reassessment of the impact of Lenins analysis
of imperialism and Kautskys analysis of ultra-imperialism.
Third, the almost simultaneous emergence of the Age of
Globalization and the formation of the field of
colonial/postcolonial studies may call for explanation. How
can transnational or transoceanic perspectives raise new
questions and how can past precedents take us beyond current
paradigms of imperialism? These new approaches have prompted
a rethinking of earlier theoretical paradigms, conceptual
delineations, and overall assessments of imperialisms and
anti-imperialisms. We are interested in the ways,
cross-disciplinary approaches of gender, transnational, and
subaltern studies, discourse analyses such as Saids paradigm
of Orientalism, and cultural studies influence these
critical investigations. The rise of Islamist radicalism
reminds us that, for better or worse, modern, secular,
anti-colonial nationalism, supported by metropolitan lefts,
is not (and never was) the only possible form and strategy
of opposition to imperialism. Indeed, new imperialisms and
their adversaries flow at least in part from unfulfilled
promises and limitations of decolonization, the postcolonial
nation-state, and development in former
colonized/semi-colonized regions of the world, and in part
from a variety of ongoing conflicts in the postcolony and
the post-imperial states. Confronting the complexity of
empire in our times has revealed certain paradigmatic
tensions within the field of colonial/postcolonial studies
itself. How can we make anti-imperialist discourses less
exclusionary?

The editors of this special thematic issue of Radical
History Review invite contributions that discuss imperialism
in the light of new global formations and reopen the
discussion of historical empires from the perspective of
race, gender and postcolonial studies. We are also
interested in submissions that address the ways in which new
conceptualizations of empires impact our role as scholars,
teachers and students of imperialisms.

Deadline for submissions is January 1, 2005.

For further information and samples of previously published
articles, visit: http://chnm.gmu.edu/rhr

For additional information and submission guidelines please visit:
http://chnm.gmu.edu/rhr/guidelin.htm


Contact:

Radical History Review
Tamiment Library
70 Washington Square South, 10th Floor
New York, NY 10012
USA
Email: [email protected]



_________________________________

InterPhil List Administration:
http://interphil.polylog.org/

Intercultural Philosophy Calendar:
http://agd.polylog.org/cal/

Reply via email to