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Call for Publications

Theme: Decolonizing the Study of Memory
Publication: Memory Studies
Date: Special Issue
Deadline: 10.1.2023

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The field of memory studies, like many academic disciplines and
fields, is facing calls to decolonize, deimperialize, and
provincialize European-imposed and inspired knowledges. Scholars and
critics such as Audre Lorde, Frantz Fanon, Gloria Anzaldua, Ngũgĩ wa
Thiong’o, Steve Biko, and Linda Tuhiwai Smith emphasize the
importance of acknowledging, repairing, and transcending the lasting
impact of European slavery, genocidal settler colonialism, and
imperial nostalgia that have ravaged human societies and the Earth,
our ground of Being. Numerous postcolonial, decolonial, and
indigenous scholars as well as critics continue to shine a bright
light on the enduring legacy of white supremacy in academia and
beyond, calling for reparatory justice.

Ongoing debates concerning provincializing, de-Westernizing,
decolonizing, and other interventions, highlight the reality that
Western knowledge regimes’ dominance has yet to be fully recognized,
overcome, and dismantled (Quijano 1992; Chakrabarty 2000;
Maldonado-Torres 2006; Chen 2010; Kimmerer 2014). Accordingly, we
would like to ask whether ethnic, national, cosmopolitan,
multidirectional, transcultural, and planetary memories or the
‘floating gap’ are indeed as transhistorical, universal or natural as
sometimes suggested? These questions highlight the reality that the
field of memory studies is, in many ways, still dominated by
approaches, concepts, and methods designed in the Global North
creating an undeniable “Euro/Anglo centrism” (Olick et al 2017).
Furthermore, we would like to question: Do cultural memories confirm
or contradict seemingly hard and fast distinctions between history
and memory, male and female, modern and traditional, culture and
nature, sacred and profane or life and death? How do cultural
memories in specific local, regional, and transnational
constellations force us to rethink seemingly universal concepts? How
do we think and do history and memory?

For Memory Studies, therefore, the present moment bears at least
three crucial challenges: First, to highlight the limitations of
currently dominant approaches, concepts, and methods; second, to
introduce to memory studies the plethora of memory concepts hitherto
ignored but debated in other fields, such as postcolonial studies,
decolonial thought, indigenous studies, and the natural sciences; and
lastly, to encourage the practice of “epistemological disobedience”
(Mignolo 2011) in order to move beyond the current cultural memory
frameworks that undergird the field. This, in turn, expands and
creates new intellectual spaces such as those pioneered by feminist,
decolonial, and queer critics including M. Jacqui Alexander, Hilary
Beckles, Saidiya Hartman, bell hooks, and Sylvia Wynter, to name a
few.

To the foregoing end, this special issue invites the rich, dynamic,
and diverse cultural memories and scholarship currently outside the
framework of Memory Studies to think through decolonial and
indigenous lenses, and thus fundamentally challenge the field. Our
aim is to substantially extend interdisciplinary debates to look
beyond European, Western, and White memory cultures and scholarship
that substantially define knowledge production on the study of
history and memory to date.

This special issue responds to the urgent calls to both decolonize
and reconceptualize the study of memory and Memory Studies in three
ways:

- We invite current memory studies scholars to investigate the role
  of decolonization and provincialization to existing approaches,
  theories and methods.
- We explicitly invite scholars from disciplines less represented in
  Memory Studies to contribute to the decolonization of socio-cultural
  memory studies.
- We also invite reviews of existing work, with a particular interest
  in those not in the English language, on the subject of decolonizing
  and provincializing memory studies or indigenous ways of knowing
  that have hitherto been marginalized.

In a word, the collected essays seek to open the doors beyond the
field’s institutional framework, taking seriously the fundamental
challenge and rich potential of not only decolonizing and
provincializing the study of memory and Memory Studies, but
re-envisioning the field.

Some questions that may be addressed in this special issue include,
but are not limited to:

- What is the role of language in creating memory and memory
  practices and how does multilingualism or translation intervene in
  creation or dissemination?
- How do oral, visual, and/or sound cultures contribute to memory
  practices?
- How can non-written based epistemologies enrich our knowledge base
  in memory studies?
- How does an analysis of Anthropocene memory complicate our
  understanding of global systems?
- What memory practices interrupt or reject the binaries of
  male/female, modern/traditional, life/death, sacred/profane, etc.?
- What theoretical or methodological innovations or interventions are
  needed to recognize and integrate non-Western memory cultures and
  their study into memory studies?

We invite abstracts of 300-500 words to be sent by January 10 as an
email attachment to:
decolonizingmem...@gmail.com

Informal inquiries can also be sent to that same email address prior
to the deadline. Articles should be approximately 6,000 words in
length and must be submitted by May 1, 2023 for double-blind peer
review.

 
Co-editors:
Ruramisai Charumbira (University of Western Ontario)
Jocelyn Martin (Université Catholique de l’Ouest/ Ateneo de Manila
University)
Mary M. McCarthy (Drake University)
Jarula M. I. Wegner (Zhejiang University)


Journal website:
https://journals.sagepub.com/home/MSS






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