__________________________________________________

Call for Papers

"Framing the Human: Mediated Notions through the
Disciplines"
InterCulture: An International and Interdisciplinary
eJournal
Spring 2007 Issue

__________________________________________________


With the advancement of evolutionary biology, cosmology, and
the shift in religious and cultural studies the context of
the concept of what it means to be human has changed
dramatically in the last century and a half. InterCulture is
looking to the intersections between science, cultural, and
literary studies as a fruitful space for investigating such
key topics that transform our own mediated understanding of
ourselves. With a push for interdisciplinarity,
transdiciplinarity, and crossdisciplinarity as part of the
attempt to create overarching and broader perspectives for
contextualizing the human, modern disciplines are finding
themselves responsible to one another in their portrayal of
the human. In particular, InterCulture is looking to publish
articles that deal with theoretical perspectives from the
humanities to the life sciences that specifically discuss
"human" as it can be categorized and mediated OR the debate
about the conception of the human and what it means to us in
the 21st century. InterCulture is seeking papers that
discuss the new context of the human from any
interdisciplinary perspective.

The door is not only open to critiques that pit disciplines
against each other in a continued "culture war" mentality.
The possibility also exists of treating the notion of
"human" in a non-reductionist manner that illuminates
conditions necessary for the possibility of treating this
notion. In other words, consideration of conjunctions of
disciplines as a basis for the concepts of "human" that are
interdependent upon one another and usually overlooked are
also welcome topics.

For example, consider the following questions: What does it
mean to be human? Is there some form of inherent priority to
the disciplinary structures that present notions of the
human? Do disciplines rest circularly upon one another for
the conception of "human"? In which direction are the
conceptions of the human developing? How do the ways in
which we mediate the human reflect themselves in our
conceptions? Does economics affect our conception of the
human? Is there a Red Shift or a Blue Shift in the
articulation of the human? In other words, are we coming
closer to a unified perspective or are the conceptions
becoming irretrievably separated? Is the old literary
conception of the human lost to scientific authority? If so,
can we reshape the category of the human to make it viable
again for literary and cultural studies? How have
methodological practices affected our notions of ourselves?,
etc.

Articles and essay that deal with all such questions and
more are welcomed. Other possible topics include:

- How do we know who we are? Standard interdisciplinary
  views of mediated humanity
- Media and the human. How does the public view itself?
- Economics and human behavior
- Science and Culture and their objects of study
- Consilience: Can it work?
- Gould vs. Dawkins and the idea of NOMA
- Foucault 2.0 and the future of discourse theory
- From homo.sapiens to the Human
- The Challenge of Evolutionary Psychology

Submission Guidelines
InterCulture publishes material on a rolling basis; please
allow 1-3 months for review. Articles should be submitted in
MSWord format and be between 3-8K words in length; book,
film, and music reviews should be between 750-1250 words.

All regular text in submissions must be in 12 point font,
Times New Roman, unless artistic license requires that it be
different. In such a case, please send notification with
submission so that the fonts are not lost during
reformatting.

MLA and Chicago citations are considered best for Liberal
Arts submissions. Should the interdisciplinary text require
specific citations dependant upon field of study, please
make note of this in your submission.

All submissions are peer-reviewed.
For creative work, video and images should be submitted in
commonly utilized formats. (e.g., .SWF, MP3, AVI, Real
Media, Windows Media, .JPG, .GIF, .WAV, etc.)

All submissions must include "InterCulture" in the subject
heading.

Essays deadline: April 10, 2007.


Contact:

Thomas Philbeck
Managing Editor
InterCulture e-Journal
Department of Interdisciplinary Humanities
Florida State University
432 Diffenbaugh Building
Tallahassee, FL 32306-1549
USA
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://interculture.fsu.edu




__________________________________________________

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

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

Reply via email to