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Call for Publications

Theme: Memory and Postcoloniality
Publication: Journal of Social Transformation
Date: Special Issue
Deadline: 30.10.2011

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The transdisciplinary field of memory studies has been at the
forefront of reflexive attempts to interrogate the relationship
between the politics of the present and discourses about the past.
Memory, as Zygmunt Bauman notes, is the “after-life of history” – a
constellation of living traditions, narratives, and practices that
structure contemporary life. The colonial encounter is intimately
tied with collective memory. The postcolony is the site of narratives
refracted through recollections and constructions of past violences.
Colonization, moreover, reconfigures group psychologies, producing
ambivalent economies of desire and disavowal. This issue of the
Journal of Social Transformation aims to grapple with the
contradictory, provisional, and contested subject-positions that
emerge in postcoloniality. We are particularly interested in inter-
and transdisciplinary works that analyze historically specific
processes that inform collective mnemonic practices. Submissions for
this issue may include, but are not limited to, topics such as:

- colonial history and nationalist discourses
- subaltern and countercultural histories
- decolonization and national history
- transitional justice and postcoloniality
- colonization and national psychologies and subjectivities
- specters, hauntings, and postcolonial archives
- postcolonial architecture and places of memory
- nostalgia and affect in the postcolony
- alternative modernities and temporalities

Guest Editor: Lisandro Claudio
Deadline: October 30, 2011

Submission Instructions:
Manuscripts should be sent to <[email protected]> as an electronic
attachment in Microsoft Word or Rich Text Format. Articles should not
exceed 10,000 words in length. All lines should be double-spaced.
Author names, affiliations, contact information, and an abstract of
150-200 words should be provided in a separate title page. References
to an author's own works must be made in a manner that does not
compromise anonymity.

Style:
JST uses the Chicago Manual of Style, 15th edition. Authors should
prepare manuscripts using endnotes, without a bibliography. The first
citation to a work should be a full citation. Subsequent citations of
the same work should be shortened (last name, short title, page
number).

About JST:
The Journal of Social Transformation (JST) is a new, peer-reviewed,
interdisciplinary journal published twice a year by the School of
Social Sciences of the Ateneo de Manila University. JST seeks
articles that examine current and emerging political, cultural, and
economic formations, particularly those that involve postcolonial and
Asian contexts. Grounded in a concern for justice, broadly conceived,
JST is committed to publishing work that addresses the production of
new inequalities, forms of violence, and modes of struggle and
resistance. We are especially interested in research that
investigates transformations brought on by new technologies, media
forms and institutional arrangements; contemporary migrations and
mobilities; local and global geographies; alternative conceptions of
the body and the environment; and class, racial, gender, and sexual
orders. JST welcomes both theoretical and empirical contributions
from all fields in the social and cultural sciences. The journal will
pe published online and in print.


Contact:

Bobby Benedicto, Editor
Ateneo de Manila University
Phone: +63 2 426-6001 loc. 5250
Email: [email protected]
 
 
 
 
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