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Call for Publications

Theme: In-Between Spaces
Subtitle: Interstices and Borders of Identity
Publication: Reconstruction: Studies in Contemporary Culture
Date: Issue 17.1
Deadline: 1.12.2015

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Edited by Amanda Gradisek and Ron Scott
(Abstracts 250-500 words due Dec 1, 2015, full papers due Mar 1,
2016) 

This issue invites collaborative essays that consider what Homi
Bhabba calls the “move away from the singularities of ‘class’ and
gender’ as primary conceptual and organizational categories” in The
Location of Culture. Destabilizing these constructs, once considered
monolithic, results in what Bhabba calls “‘in-between’ spaces” that
“provide the terrain for elaborating strategies of selfhood.” These
interstitial spaces “initiate new signs of identity, and innovative
sites of collaboration, and contestation, in the act of defining the
idea of society itself.” The work of this issue is to interrogate the
nature of these in-between spaces, the borders that may or may not
divide foundational categories of identity, and the way in which
these inter-spaces allow for the generation of new ideas and
theorizations of established categories. 

Authors need not only consider the theoretical perspective of Bhabba
for this issue. Spivak’s consideration of the subaltern, Anzaldua’s
approach to the culture of the border, and Hayles’s analysis of the
post-human all rely on some fundamental conceptions of identity
governed by borders of some kind--be they literal, conceptual,
theoretical, or categorical. In any case, articles should interrogate
the nature of these borders, their permeability, the effects of
passing through them, and the ways in which these constructions
affect the categories of identity they organize. Pieces should
examine the ways in which seemingly monolithic categories of identity
create interstitial or liminal spaces that allow for resistance
against constructs of power. 

Taking this formulation as its starting point, we propose an issue
will be composed of essays that model this methodology in practice as
well as ideology; essays should be the work of collaborators who work
in different periods, genres, or disciplines, and bring together
aesthetic representations that seem, at first glance, based on binary
and negative definition. Possible approaches might include the
investigation of canonical literature, philosophy, theory, or art
with popular film, contemporary cultural issues, science fiction
novels, or horror genres. By modeling the theoretical lens through
the methodology of the issue itself, we hope to explore the nature of
different sort of interstitial ideas through collaborative and
multifaceted analysis. 

One article is a collaboration between Ron Scott (rhetoric and
compositions) and Amanda Gradisek (American literature), bringing
together canonical Harlem with the popular genre the zombie film.
This article considers the nature of passing through strikingly
different texts to interrogate an established literary and historical
practice through an interdisciplinary, contemporary, and prismatic
approach. Examining categorical identity in this piece in the Harlem
Renaissance and a a modern zombie film shows how the trope of passing
creates in between spaces that allow both the zombies who pass and
the blacks who pass to undermine the system. This issue will
particularly focus on kinds of borders between categories, which the
methodology will also reflect.

Possible collaborative topics may include but are not limited to
canonical texts in context with contemporary popular texts, or an
examination of a canonical text from different historical periods in
relation to more current to specific popular cultural texts, films,
music, art, or digital texts. Whatever texts authors choose, articles
should address specific concepts of liminal spaces in relation to
formation of identities and larger scale, hierarchical social
structures. 

Articles with tentative titles and contributors:

“Reconceiving and Redeeming the Self: Passing, the Harlem
Renaissance, and Zombies”
Amanda R. Gradisek (Walsh University)
Ron Scott (Walsh University) 

“Surf's Up: Thomas Pynchon at the Edge of American Culture”
Charlie Bertsch (University of Arizona)
Sam Schwartz (Oregon State University) 

Please send abstracts by Dec. 1 to Amanda Gradisek
([email protected]) and Ron Scott ([email protected]). Submissions
may take the form of scholarly articles (5-10,000 words), multimedia
submissions, book reviews and any other format you feel may be
interesting for an online cultural studies journal.
 

Reconstruction: Studies in Contemporary Culture (ISSN: 1547-4348) is
an innovative online cultural studies journal dedicated to fostering
an intellectual community composed of scholars and their audience,
granting them all the ability to share thoughts and opinions on the
most important and influential work in contemporary interdisciplinary
studies. Reconstruction publishes three Themed Issues and one Open
Issue per year. 

Send Open Issue submissions (year round) to:
[email protected] and submissions for Themed
Issues to the appropriate editors listed on the site at:
www.reconstruction.eserver.org 

Reconstruction also accepts proposal for special issue editors and
topics. Reconstruction is indexed in the MLA International
Bibliography.

 
Contact:

Reconstruction: Studies in Contemporary Culture
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://reconstruction.eserver.org




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