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Call for Publications

Theme: World-Making and World-Traveling with Decolonial Feminisms and
Women of Color
Publication: Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies
Date: Special Issue
Deadline: 1.2.2019

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This special issue of Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies invites
contributions of scholarly, creative, and visual works that share
diverse modes of decolonial feminist praxis in relation to the
lifeworks of philosopher María Lugones. Lugones’ conceptualization of
“playfulness, ‘world’-traveling and loving perception,” and her
analysis of the “coloniality of gender,” frame our conversation on
decolonial feminisms. 2020 will mark the thirtieth anniversary of the
inclusion of Lugones’ essay, “Playfulness, ‘World’-Traveling, and
Loving Perception,” in the anthology edited by Gloria Anzaldúa,
Making Face, Making Soul/Haciendo Caras. We offer this call as a way
to consider the historical, theoretical, pedagogical, and praxical
engagements with the term “Women of Color” as it travels across times
and spaces.

Lugones writes, “I recommend to women of color in the U.S. to learn
to love each other by traveling to each other’s worlds. In making
this recommendation, I have in mind giving a new meaning to coalition
and propose “Women of Color” as a term for a coalition of deep
understanding fashioned through “world”-traveling.” We see Lugones’
sustained engagement with “Women of Color” as an opportunity to study
the local and global genealogies of praxis by people who are
resistant to the racialized and gendered regimes of
modernity-coloniality, as well as an opportunity to trace the travels
of her thought and the legacies of her resistance. We also understand
this conversation about the planetary modes of articulating “Women of
Color” as coalition building.

The stakes for ‘world’-traveling and coalition making is
re-articulated in the foundational article “Toward a Decolonial
Feminism” This text illuminates an urgency and conceptual reach for
envisioning the transformation of the social through love, learning,
coalition and resistance. Thus we read Lugones’ decolonial feminism
as entwined, critical, life-loving responses to what Audre Lorde
would call “the societal deathwish” of coloniality. In bringing these
two constellations of Lugones’ thought together, we seek to produce a
space of engagement that shares and evokes multiple resonances,
conceptual terms, images, and imaginaries for decolonial feminist
worlds.

We invite contributors to consider the following questions:

- How does Lugones’ decolonial feminisms meaningfully engage with the
  term “Women of Color” as a praxis of coalition?

- What is facilitated when “Women of Color” thought travels to
  different spaces – across public, institutional, temporal and
  disciplinary boundaries? What frictions and possibilities occur as
  it crosses borders?

- What are the politics of translation that complicate traveling
  across ‘worlds,’ in the philosophical sense that Lugones evokes, as
  well as in regard to geographies and geo-politics of knowledge? What
  are the hierarchies of knowledge, including vocabularies, academic
  architectures, and the neo-liberalization of the sharing of
  knowledge – including intellectual property regimes and the curation
  of knowledge by academic publishing industries – that act as
  barriers to travel and coalition building?

- What are specific instances and cases of decolonial feminist
  praxis? Where, when, and by whom do these praxical engagements
  occur? How do they intersect with the genealogies of the phrase
  “Women of Color”?

We invite submissions by scholars, practitioners, artists, and
activists engaged in theorizing the relation between material
struggle and decolonial imaginaries. Some approaches to consider
include the following topics, questions, tensions, and current
conversations surrounding “Women of Color” and decolonial feminisms:

- ‘World’-traveling as coalition building
- Invocations of “Women of Color” as historical and contemporary
  praxical act of world-building
- Extensions of Lugones’ thinking: including traveling with
  ‘world’-traveling; playfulness; loving perception; streetwalker
  tactics; faithful witnessing; complex communication; active
  subjectivity
- Knowledge systems and tongues; oral history, poetry, visual art,
  other media as decolonial feminist world-building
- Decolonial feminist world-building in different global locations
- Multiple coalitional possibilities as decolonial praxis (i.e.,such
  as ‘Women of Color” feminisms; decolonial feminist thought; African,
  African diasporic and black, Afro-Latinx, Arab, Southwest Asian and
  Muslim, Asian-American, Chicanx, indigenous, Latinx, Latin American,
  Native, Pacific Islander, South Asian, Southeast Asian, feminisms);
- Decolonial “queer”-ness, queer women of color, and trans (of color)
  decolonial theorizing and its enactments of world traveling
- The coloniality of language, wild/untamed tongues, languaging, and
  decolonial possibilities
- Material and imaginary modalities and the politics of translation,
  opacity, legibility
- Dreaming, praxis and its pedagogical possibilities
- Decolonial feminist praxes, aesthetics and/or methodologies
- Diasporic, transnational, and migratory subjects and subjectivities

To encourage a bridging of coalitional thinking, ‘world’-traveling
pedagogies, and the decolonial feminist remaking/widening of the
self-in-relation to others, this call seeks a range of co-authored,
collaborative, and collective works including but not limited to the
following creative-critical forms:

- Scholarly essay/article (10,000 words including endnotes and
  references)
- Photography/photo essay
- Activist report
- Manifesto
- Visual art
- Sound/audio works (provide audio transcript)
- Digital art/works
- Lexicon/vocabulary
- Interview / dialogue
- Multimodal work
- Poetry/fiction
- Testimonio

Submission Deadline: February 1, 2019

Scholarly essays should not exceed 10,000 words, including notes and
references, with an abstract of no more than 250 words. All article
manuscripts, poetry, essays, and multi-media submissions must be
submitted through Frontiers’ editorial manager. All submissions will
be subject to external review. Citations should follow the Chicago
Manual of Style, 16thedition, with “humanities style” endnotes. For
more details please see Frontier’s submission guidelines.

Please submit all works through our online editorial manager and
briefly state that your submission is to be considered for the
special issue: http://www.editorialmanager.com/fron/


Special Issue Editors

Wanda Alarcón, Visiting Scholar
Chicano Studies Research Center
University of Los Angeles California

Dalida Maria Benfield, Faculty Co-Chair
Vermont College of Fine Arts

Annie Fukushima, Assistant Professor
Division of Ethnic Studies
School for Cultural and Social Transformation
University of Utah

Marcelle Maese-Cohen, Assistant Professor
Department of English
University of San Diego

All correspondence can be sent to the guest editors at:
frontiersjour...@utah.edu

Journal website:
https://frontiers.osu.edu




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