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Call for Publications

Theme: Humanity
Subtitle: Surplus to Requirements
Publication: Arena Journal
Date: 2017
Deadline: 1.8.2016

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Over the last three decades critical scholars have observed the
emergence of a new kind of ‘poor’. For example, in 1998 Zygmunt
Bauman claimed (in Arena Journal no. 9) that the new poor were unlike
their predecessors in that they had no role at all to play in the
type of society that was emerging. This transformation, integral to
the workings of technologically accelerated capitalism, has now
extended to large sections of humanity who struggle with the
implications of economic and social redundancy. Some analysts now
speak of the 80/20 society, a scenario in which 80 per cent of
humanity will be deprived of any kind of ‘useful’ role in the social
life of the whole society.

This process has various manifestations: a global surplus army of
unemployed; a proliferation of ‘warehoused’ prisoners incarcerated in
privately run prisons; waves of refugees displaced through processes
of globalisation, including war and climate change; asylum seekers
whose pleas for sanctuary are refused. More broadly, scholars observe
diffuse and pervasive forms of economic, social and existential
precariousness, where the specificity of inequalities once identified
with the oppression of Indigenous people, for example, have become
generalised.

These sections of humanity are no longer ‘required’ in that the
global market is able to function quite effectively without their
participation. As well as ethical questions concerning the fate of
these people, or structural ones about the long-term viability of
such a system, there are also pressing political questions, for
example those associated with the disappearing middle class fearing
the loss of further ground to those ‘below’.

These patterns are joined by cultural shifts associated with new
technologies such as the increasing ‘redundancy’ of the natural in
reproductive processes and the exploitation of people as means, not
ends, in organ trading and other biomedical practices. Such changes
de-emphasise the ground upon which the human is the site of
orientation for life and an end in itself. Further, while the turn to
post-humanist forms of interpretation across the social sciences and
humanities seeks to grapple with elements of these transformations
they often confirm the displacement of the human from the centre of
critical scholarship and politics.

We invite responses to these provocations with proposals for papers
that explore the issue of ‘surplus humanity’. Provocative incursions
in the range of 2-3,000 words as well as proposals for fully
developed papers of 7-8,000 words are welcomed.

Please send abstracts to [email protected] by 1 August 2016. The
expected deadline for completed papers is 1 February 2017. The
collection will be simultaneously released as a special issue of the
journal and a book.

Editorial working group for this special issue:
Simon Cooper, Melinda Hinkson, Dan Tout.

Journal website:
http://arena.org.au/arena-journal-contents-pages/




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