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Call for Publications

Theme: When East is North and South
Subtitle: East Asia, Latin America, and the Decolonization of
Trans-Pacific Studies
Publication: Edited Book
Deadline: 15.7.2020

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We would like to share with you our call for chapters for a book on
East Asia, Latin America, and the decolonization of Trans-Pacific
studies.

The provisional title is:
When East is North and South. East Asia, Latin America, and the
Decolonization of Trans-Pacific Studies

Introduction:

In the last few years, a renewed interest for new approaches to East
Asian and Latin-American studies has led to a significant enrichment
and diversification of tools for understanding the different
dimensions — historiographical, literary, socio-political,
environmental — that condition the lives of the peoples who are
geographically located in these territories. These studies have
traditionally been pregnant with Eurocentric, Orientalist, and
subalternizing narratives, both in their epistemological tools and
their knowledge-production logics. This new generation of scholars is
then faced with the challenge of “losing the North.” This motto
entails, among other things, a commitment to distancing from
traditional academic constructions by both building on and
problematizing relatively recent transformative research standpoints.

Objectives:

This project, which has the backing of a well-known publishing house,
tries to provide devices for the common construction of an inter- and
trans-disciplinary academic scenario that incorporates debates
happening across the Global South. It defends the relevance of
working on the establishment of epistemological bridges across the
Pacific that can finally leave behind the constraints of treating the
experiences of these regions merely as an “area studies” or a
“peripheral” concern. These categories, imposed as conceptual
watertight compartments, have systematically impeded a comparative
approach that could bypass Western epistemological hegemony and
logics of knowledge production. Experiences happening in Latin
America and those happening in East Asia have been bound to a narrow
and estranging mechanism of alienation from each other. The two
shores of the Pacific have seldom been conceived as speaking to each
other despite their wide range of connections and acute degree of
interdependence. Migration flows, cultural exchange, trade, a shared
history of colonial oppression: there are a myriad of elements tying
these regions to each other. This is not a new discovery, but a
common approach to understanding these experiences has been to
address them as region-locked paradigms. Their interpretation has
unfortunately more often than not relied on an epistemological
toolbox based exclusively on a Western-centric understanding of world
phenomena and international relationships. This book will attempt to
build on decolonial attempts of disassembling these conceptual and
methodological scaffolds by encouraging what we consider is an
underdeveloped debate: the Pacific as a space of exchange, mutual
dialogue, and an arena for decolonial comparative studies.

Problematizing categories themselves is one of the principal axes of
this book. We will analyze and re-signify the very definitions of
“Latin America”, “East Asia,” and the shared space in-between of
“Trans-Pacific” as well as regional, national, ethnic, religious, and
cultural borders. There is no denying that episodes of confrontation
resulting from extreme poverty, unemployment, environmental
disasters, and methods of predatory resource extraction constitute a
systemic threat. These sources of oppression range from religious
fundamentalisms to the imposition of states of exception, just like
the one we are currently experiencing across the globe due to the
COVID-19 pandemic, with its untamed and unknown long-lasting effects
on civil rights and liberties. Repression is, however, not
horizontally distributed. While the Global North and the nation-state
establishment have been seen as the carrier of “Western" and
“modernizing” values, subaltern subjects have been silenced, expelled
to the unofficial and non-scientific field of “memories.” Identity
diversity represents, across the two shores of the Pacific, an
element that is worth dignifying and drawing attention to.

Target Audience:

Due to the interdisciplinary and trans-disciplinary nature of this
book, this call is open for contributions of scholars and researchers
from different backgrounds in the fields of History, Literature,
Social Sciences, and Migration Studies. Additionally, the editors
welcome contributions from scholars in relevant fields that include
Human Geography, Anthropology, Environmental Sciences, International
Relations, Arts, and Economy. Principally, the target audience can
acquire further insights on how to use new approaches in research,
academic fields, and analytical work.

Submission:

Please send an email to olivie...@ugr.es and jordi.serra...@gmail.com
containing:

- Author Name and Affiliation
- Chapter Title
- Chapter Abstract (300-500 words)
- Short Bio (150 words)

The deadline for the reception of proposals is July 15, 2020.

Editors will share their decision regarding the proposals by July 30,
2020.

Full manuscripts will be due by October 15, 2020.

If you have any questions, please contact the email addresses
mentioned above.


Contact:

Jordi Serrano-Muñoz
El Colegio de México and Open University of Catalonia
Email: jordi.serra...@gmail.com




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