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Call for Publications

Theme: Sensuous Mobilities
Publication: Australian Geographer
Date: Volume 46 (2015)
Deadline: 7.2.2014

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As we move through the world, and as our worlds move in, through and
around us, our bodies are aroused, stimulating affect, emotions,
imagination, memory, creativity, chemical reactions, audible
responses and libidos, to name but an enticing few responses. In
recent years debates that focus on the corporeal experiences of
mobility have opened up new ways of thinking about movement that
complicate issues of representation and that raise important
questions about senses, materialities and the capacities of bodies
more generally. A great deal of work is still required, however, to
better understand the productive possibilities of this emergent area
of inquiry.

This Call for Papers around the theme of 'sensuous mobilities'
enables a focused exploration of emerging thinking opened up by
analysis of the embodied dimensions of different types of mobility.
The Australian Geographer is a leading national and international
journal publishing articles that are conceptually-informed and
empirically-grounded. This theme issue invites expression of
interests from scholars critically engaging with the embodied
dimensions of mobility in human geography and related fields. As a
list to stimulate ideas for potential contributions, but in no way a
fixed delineation, possible themes might include:

- The role of the sensuous body – sight, sound, taste, smell and
  touch – and, in particular, how they entwine to create sensuous
  mobilites and sensual encounters;
- Sensuous mobilities in relation to the subject;
- 'Non-Western' perspectives of sensuous mobilties;
- Unspoken and unspeakable sensual mobilities;
- Sensuality and immobility;
- Sensual mobilities and the more-than-human;
- The undiscovered/unknown/forgotten senses.

The special issue seeks contributions representing a range of
mobilities (such as migration, refugees, tourism, military service,
virtual travel, imaginative travel, pilgrimage, commuting, short-car
trips, leisurely/sporting pursuits (walking, cycling, sailing and so
forth). Proposals must be conceptually-led, and may examine new
methods for the investigation, analysis and presentation of the
corporeal experiences of mobilities. A word limit of 5-6,000 is
proposed for each paper (including references). Detailed information
on the review process and paper requirements will be provided on
acceptance.

Writing Schedule:
Please submit article proposals (comprised of an abstract of up to
250 words and a list of highlights detailing the main contribution of
the research to wider debates in the form of 3 to 5 bullet points
(maximum 250 words)) and a short biography (including recent
publications) to the volume's editors at <[email protected]> by 7th
February 2014. The guest editors will communicate decisions by early
March 2014. First drafts of accepted contributions will be due by the
end of July 2014, with the target date for publication being early
2015. We will also be seeking to expand the issue into an edited book.

Guest Editors:
Garth Lean (University of Western Sydney, Australia)
Gordon Waitt (University of Wollongong, Australia) 


Contact:

Dr Garth Lean
Geography and Urban Studies
School of Social Sciences and Psychology
University of Western Sydney
Locked Bag 1797
Penrith, NSW 2751
Australia
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/titles/00049182.asp




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