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Showing posts with label Environmental History / Studies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Environmental History / Studies. Show all posts

Monday, March 18, 2024

Call For Papers: Cute #Ecologies: a critical-creative Symposium 7th June 2024 Online (Zoom)

 Hosted by AWW-STRUCK, this day of lightning talks and presentations on critical research and creative practice features a roundtable conversation between invited speakers (confirmed):

  • Miranda Lowe (principal curator of Crustacea at the Natural History Museum London).
  • Claire Catterall (curator of Cute at Somerset House, London)
  • Hugh Warwick (author of Beauty in the Beast and spokesperson for The British Hedgehog Preservation Society)

Encountering cute forms of nature, from bunnies and hedgehogs to monkeys and deer, is an everyday experience for most of us. They appear on tea towels, cakes and images gone viral on social media. The cute nonhuman might even be our companion animal. The apparently simple, benign nature of cuteness means it goes unexamined, especially in the context of the environmental crisis where the aesthetic is likely to appear irrelevant, if not irreverent. This symposium challenges such thinking by asking: Can cuteness prompt care-giving behaviour for environments? What power dynamics exist in the ‘cutification’ of flora and fauna? What fate for ‘uncute’ species? 

Recent developments in cute studies demonstrate the power of cute to increase pro-social and pro-environmental behaviours. Conservation charities know as much, employing the cutest species to drive public donation. However, the bias toward charismatic megafauna is also known to be a problem. Anthropomorphism and domestication emerge again and again in our encounters with the nonhuman. And perhaps ourselves. As cute studies scholar Joshua Paul Dale recently suggested, Homo sapiens may well have emerged because women preferred cuddlier companions to cavemen. 

We welcome papers that address topics through critical research and/or through creative practice (poetry, film, performance, music, visual artwork). Topics or areas of research may include:

  • Animal studies and plant studies
  • Childhood culture and children’s geography
  • Charismatic megafauna 
  • Domestication and scale
  • Conservation science and political ecology
  • Popular culture, Disney studies, anime and manga studies
  • Commodification, material objects and waste
  • Technology, cyborgs and artificial intelligence 

Possible formats include: 5-minute lightning talks, 20-minute presentations.

Please submit abstracts and/or short proposals (300 words max), telling us whether you’d like to give a lightning talk or presentation to awwstruck.info@gmail.com by 19 April 2024. Please include a short bio (100 words max). If you are a creative practitioner, please include two samples of your work.

This event is organised by Dr Isabel Galleymore (University of Birmingham) and Caroline Harris (Royal Holloway, University of London) who founded AWW-STRUCK in 2021. This symposium is supported by the Arts and Humanities Research Council, part of UK Research and Innovation.

Wednesday, November 1, 2023

International #Conference on #Literature and #Ecology-SRM University- March 2024

LITERATURE AND ECOLOGY

Concept Note

In an era marked by escalating environmental concerns and a pressing need for sustainable coexistence with the natural world, the study of literature through the lens of ecology has gained significance. Ecocriticism, as an interdisciplinary field, explores the intricate relationships between literature, culture, and the environment, offering valuable insights into how human beings perceive, interact with, and represent the natural world in their creative expressions. The proposed conference aims to delve deep into the multifaceted dimensions of ecocritical approaches to literature, fostering discussions that illuminate the symbiotic connection between artistic imagination and ecological consciousness.

The ecocritical approach recognizes the power of literature to shape perceptions and attitudes towards ecology – the environment, environmental ethics, activism, and policy-making. Analyzing the ways in which nature is portrayed, celebrated, exploited, or lamented in literary works, scholars can unravel the ecological, social, and philosophical implications of these representations. The proposed conference will provide a platform for academics, researchers, and enthusiasts to explore key themes that discuss the following issues:

  1. Nature as Character and Metaphor: How does literature personify nature, attributing human-like qualities to natural entities? How do ecological metaphors and symbols enrich our understanding of environmental issues?
  2. Wilderness and Urban Landscapes: Investigate depictions of wilderness and urban environments in literature. What do these portrayals reveal about the human-nature relationship and the impacts of urbanization?
  3. Environmental Justice: Examine narratives that address environmental inequalities, marginalized communities, and the socio-economic implications of ecological degradation.
  4. Climate Fiction (Cli-Fi): Explore the emerging genre of climate fiction, analyzing how authors envision and convey potential futures shaped by climate change.
  5. Eco-spirituality and Indigenous Knowledge: Delve into the spiritual connections between humans and the natural world, drawing from indigenous knowledge systems and cultural perspectives.
  6. Ecofeminism: Discuss the intersections between gender, ecology, and literature, exploring how feminist perspectives contribute to ecological discourse.
  7. Postcolonial Ecocriticism: Analyze how colonial legacies influence literary representations of landscapes, resource exploitation, and the indigenous relationship with nature.
  8. Ecopoetics: Study the aesthetic dimensions of eco-poetry and eco-prose, considering how literary forms and techniques engage with ecological themes.
  9. Theoretical Considerations: Explore and critique the contribution of theorists on the subject of Ecocriticism, Literature and Ecology, and Nature Writing.
  10. Specific authors and their texts.

 

This conference seeks to foster an inclusive and diverse dialogue, inviting scholars from literature, environmental studies, philosophy, cultural studies, and related fields to participate in a stimulating environment, examining literary texts from different historical periods, genres, and cultural contexts. Participants will contribute to a nuanced understanding of humanity's evolving relationship with the natural world. Through critical analysis and discussion, the seminar aims to unearth the transformative potential of literature in shaping ecological awareness and inspiring sustainable action.

Paper proposals are invited that engage with these thematic areas and encourage innovative interpretations, comparative analyses, and interdisciplinary explorations. Fostering collaboration and sharing insights, the seminar aspires to illuminate the ways in which ecocritical approaches to literature contribute to our collective efforts in nurturing a more ecologically conscious and harmonious world.

 

How to submit your abstract:

Abstracts of about 200-250 words are invited on panels 1-10 listed above. Please follow the following format:

 

Panel under which the abstract may be considered (1 to 10):

Mode of presentation: online (for delegates from outside India) or in person?

Is ppt required? Yes or No:

Name of the participant:

Designation and Affiliation:

Email id:

Title of the abstract:

The abstract in 200-250 words

Keywords (4-5):

 

Note:

  1. The seminar will be hosted by SRM University, Delhi-NCR, Sonepat, India.
  2. This will be a hybrid event. Participants from outside India will make their presentations online.
  3. Participants from India will attend the seminar in person.
  4. Details regarding Registration fee/accommodation will be sent along with the acceptance letters. For (online) participants from abroad there will be no fee.
  5. Full papers will be invited before the seminar.
  6. Selected papers will go into a volume to be published by Springer.

 Mail your abstracts by Nov 15, 2023, to ency.iwie@gmail.com with a copy to melusmelow@gmail.com

Important Deadlines:

Announcement: October 20, 2023

Deadline for Abstracts: November 15, 2023

Acceptance letters to be sent by: November 30, 2023

Full papers due by: January 30, 2024.

Proposed conference dates: 2-3 March 2024

MANJU JAIDKA (Prof), Director of Humanities

SRM University, Delhi-NCR, Sonepat, India

Sunday, October 29, 2023

Call for Papers: #Disturbed #Traditions: #Folklore in the #Anthropocene_ #Journal of #Folklore #Research.

 




Dear Colleagues,

We are recirculating the following updated call for papers for the special journal issue “Disturbed Traditions: Folklore in the Anthropocene.” This issue will now be submitted for intended publication with the Journal of Folklore Research.




Call for Papers: Disturbed Traditions: Folklore in the Anthropocene.

Renowned folklorist Barre Toelken once described how, while growing up in one of the small Massachusetts towns that was destroyed in 1938 in order to build the Quabbin Reservoir, members of his local community “and their descendants [continued] to gather near the shore for picnics and nostalgic conversation, and photos from early times there were saved like holy relics” (Toelken 1996, 411). This maintenance of a shared sense of place and local identity in the face of human-induced destruction is not unlike many others that folklorists have documented. Timothy Tangherlini, for example, studied the process by which Korean Americans reasserted a sense of place in Koreatown, Los Angeles, following the 1992 riots though “the public staging of culturally informed performances…and the repeated telling of narratives that emphasized place” (Tangherlini 1999, 155). More recently, the wave of folklore scholarship that followed the 2005 Hurricane Katrina disaster examined the push for “narrative coherence,” often from outside the affected communities, in establishing a public memory of disaster (see, for example, Horigan 2018, 7), as well as the ways in which researchers can help empower affected communities, not by providing this coherence, but by offering the resources and social capital to allow them to reassert a collective sense of community and agency through the sharing of narrative (see, for example, Lindahl and Foster 2017). Working with a predominantly African American community in Pinhook, Missouri, folklorists David Todd Lawrence and Elain Lawless similarly traced the long road of survivors of a major flood event there toward the reestablishment of their community in the form of the strengthening of shared social and traditional bonds of place, even without the full reclamation of physical space; as Lawrence and Lawless put it, their participants built a sense that “community resides in a space separate from the physical location of their town” (Lawrence and Lawless 2018, 5).[i]

While each of these projects, and many more, have offered us new insights into the ways in which community members use tradition, perhaps especially narrative, to heal, reveal, reclaim, revive, or remake the bonds of social and cultural support they shared with each other —as well as reassert claims to place and identity within a wider public— these works have generally homed in on specific disaster events and their aftermath. However, increasingly, we are coming to understand that the arc of human-induced disaster is broader than any single event. With the recognition that we are in the midst of the “anthropocene,” the geological age in which humans have come to be the most significant force in shaping the natural world, scholars have begun to reframe the often-discrete way we have treated disaster events, as well to question some of the grand narratives that have sustained the Western understanding of human relations with the natural world for centuries.

In a recent article for the New York Review of Books (December 8, 2022), for example, philosopher Martha C. Nussbaum challenges the basic, everyday distinction we often make between human society and “the wild.” She writes:

Here, in a nutshell, is the Romantic idea of Nature: Human society is stale, predictable, effete. It lacks powerful sources of energy and renewal. People are alienated from one another and from themselves. The Industrial Revolution has made cities foul places where the human spirit is frequently crushed (as in Blake’s “dark Satanic Mills”). By contrast, out there somewhere—in the mountains, in the oceans, even in the wild West Wind—there beckons something truer, deeper, something uncorrupt and sublime, a type of vital energy that can restore us, because it is the analogue of our own deepest depths. Other animals are a large part of this “wild”: of Nature’s mysterious and vital energy (think of Blake’s “Tyger, tyger, burning bright”).

Interestingly, she also notes a point already familiar to folklorists: that this Romantic strain of thinking was also applied to different segments of human society (and correspondingly underwrote the foundations of our own discipline): “Many nineteenth-century Romantics even had the idea that peasants and other poor people were part of Nature or closer to Nature, and ought to stay there in rural poverty rather than venture into the city and try to get educated.”

Moving beyond the Romantic view means, Nussbaum argues, understanding that these dichotomies (whether they are between human society and “the wild” or between civilized elites and rustic peasants) no longer exist, if they ever did. Therefore, to talk about, for example, a need to reestablish “wild” spaces to counteract human environmental degradation is to talk nonsense. This line of thought, Nussbaum writes, “presupposes that there is such a thing in the world as “wild” Nature: spaces that are not under human control and domination. It presupposes that it is possible for humans to leave animals alone. That presupposition is false. However large the tracts of land may be, all land in our world is thoroughly under human control.”

Nussbaum’s view echoes that of anthropologist Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing, who argues that the condition of the Anthropocene, a creation of modern capitalism, is not one of stability at the center and precarity around the edges, but rather one in which precarity is the norm of human society and the natural world (Tsing 2015, 20). As a result, Tsing calls for a revised understanding of the interconnections of human society, the global economy, and the natural world, one that also jettisons notions of progressive, scalable advancement that have frequently dominated both critical and celebratory discourses from the Enlightenment onward:

For humanists, assumptions of progressive human mastery have encouraged a view of nature as a romantic space of antimodernity. Yet for twentieth-century scientists, progress also unselfconsciously framed the study of landscapes. Assumptions about expansion slipped into the formulation of population biology. New developments in ecology make it possible to think quite differently by introducing cross-species interactions and disturbance histories. In this time of diminished expectations, I look for disturbance-based ecologies in which many species sometimes live together without either harmony or conquest (Tsing 2015, 5).

Folklorists are starting to become invested in this kind of holistic, interconnected, anthropogenic view of the world as well, and to contend with what our role in addressing it may be. For example, a 2023 conference of the UK’s Folklore Society will tackle the topic “Folklore, Geography and Environment: Ways of Knowing Water, Landscape and Climate in the Anthropocene.” It presents as its centrals questions: 1) What…kinds of knowledge might inform our responses to the challenge of increasingly volatile relationships with water: what can anthropologists, folklorists, and human geographers tell flood and climate science about human/water/landscape relationships? and 2) How we can make that other knowledge intelligible to mainstream climate and flood science: how is knowledge about the human/water/landscape relationship coproduced and reproduced? What distinctive perspectives can scholarship from outside the physical geosciences bring to the urgent need to develop realistic, Anthropocene-ready resilience strategies?

To these excellent questions, the present special issue adds several broader ones: how should a recognition of the pervasiveness of human influence, in the form of commodity chains, global flows of media, and the intervention into or disruption of the natural environment, reorient our thinking about folklore? How should looking at disaster events not as discrete occurrences, but as part of this larger web of human-induced changes in the environment shift how we understand the processes of recovery, resilience, and sustainability through folklore that we have so well demonstrated in the past? How should we acknowledge the significance of digital spaces as local and global focal points for shared social memory, commiseration, and recuperation within the framework of expanding environmental crises and place-based folklore? This Special Issue relaunching at The Journal of Folklore Research will seek to offer answers to these and other pressing questions. We call for the submission of works that address one or more of these or related questions, and are particularly interested in essays that can also examine how these impacts and responses should be understood in terms of larger questions around issues such as race, ethnicity, class, identity, and inequality.

We request that, prior to submitting a manuscript, interested authors initially submit a proposed title and a long abstract of 400–600 words summarizing their intended contribution. Please send this to the guest editors (abb20@psu.edu and sed287@psu.edu). Abstracts will be reviewed by the guest editors for the purposes of ensuring proper fit within the scope of the special issue. Full manuscripts will undergo peer review prior to acceptance with JFR.









Works Cited

Andersen, David M. 1974. “The Los Angeles Earthquake and the Folklore of Disaster.” Western Folklore 33 (4): 331–36. https://doi.org/10.2307/1498550.

Horigan, Kate Parker. 2018. Consuming Katrina: Public Disaster and Personal Narrative. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi.

Lawrence, David Todd, and Elaine J. Lawless. 2018. When They Blew the Levee: Race, Politics, and Community in Pinhook, Missouri. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi.

Lindahl, Carl, and Michael Dylan Foster, eds. 2017. We are all Survivors: Verbal, Ritual and Material Ways of Narrating Disaster and Recovery. Vol. 58 (1–2). Special Issue of Fabulahttps://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/fabula-2017-0001/html.

Mechling, Jay. 1986. “The Folklore of a Public Disaster: An Editor’s Introduction.” Western Folklore 45 (4): 241–42.

Milspaw, Yvonne J. 1981. “Folklore and the Nuclear Age: ‘The Harrisburg Disaster’ at Three Mile Island.” International Folklore Review: Folklore Studies from Overseas 1 (Journal Article): 57.

Nussbaum, Martha C. December 8, 2022. “A Peopled Wilderness.” New York Review of Books. Accessed March 7, 2023. https://www.nybooks.com/articles/2022/12/08/a-peopled-wilderness-martha-c-nussbaum/.

Tangherliini, Timothy R. 1999. “Remapping Koreatown: Folklore, Narrative and the Los Angeles Riots.” Western Folklore 58 (2): 149–73. https://doi.org/10.2307/1500164.

Toelken, Barre. 1996. Dynamics Of Folklore. 1 edition. Logan, Utah: Utah State University Press.

Tsing, Anna Lowenhaupt. 2017. The Mushroom at the End of the World: On the Possibility of Life in Capitalist Ruins. Reprint edition. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

Tentative completion schedule:

  • Abstract submission deadline: 15 March 2024
  • Notification of abstract acceptance: 1 April 2024
  • Full manuscript deadline: 1 July 2024

Dr. Anthony Bak Buccitelli

Sean Edward Dixon
Guest Editors

Manuscript Submission Information

All submissions must be in either Microsoft Word (.doc or .docx) format or Rich-Text Format (.rtf). The text, quotations, and endnotes should be single or double-spaced with 1-inch margins for copy-editing and should conform to the 17th edition of the Chicago Manual of Style. If you do not have ready access to the Chicago Manual, please consult a recent issue of the Journal of Folklore Research or consult their style guide.

The following sample article gives a sense of the content and style of JFR articles:

If a manuscript includes notes, endnotes should be used rather than footnotes. All submissions should be accompanied by an abstract of no more than 200 words, as well as a 50-word author biographical statement.

Visual elements should be submitted in digital form. Please scan images (including slides) at a resolution of 300 dpi, in TIF or EPS format. Size all images to no more than 5 inches horizontally. All images, tables, diagrams, and figures should be uploaded as supplemental files rather than embedded in the manuscript itself. In the text file, please indicate where each graphic should appear by placing a "callout" description in the appropriate location (e.g., <figure 1 about here>). Drawings and maps must be submitted in a form suitable for publication without redrawing. Submit captions for all graphic elements by completing the supplemental file information form during the manuscript submission phase.

All articles should include keywords of the author's choosing. These help to index JFR publications when they are electronically distributed through services like JSTOR. If you are uncertain which keywords to use, consult the American Folklore Society's Ethnographic Thesaurus.

Contact Info: 

Dr. Anthony Bak Buccitelli

Associate Professor and Chair

American Studies Program

Pennsylvania State University, Harrisburg

abb20@psu.edu

 




Sean Edward Dixon

PhD Candidate

American Studies Program

Pennsylvania State University, Harrisburg

sed287@psu.edu

 

[i] And, of course, folklorists have been documenting folk responses to disasters, human-induced, and otherwise for decades. See, for example, Andersen 1974, Milspaw 1981, and Mechling 1986.

 




Contact Information

Sean Edward Dixon

Dr. Anthony Bak Buccitelli

>
Contact Email
sed287@psu.edu

Wednesday, May 17, 2023

CfP: Religion and Technology in an era of Rapid Digital and Climate Change-RWTH Aachen University (Germany) and IIT Madras (India)-NOV-2023


(RaTiRDaCC 2023)
Organized by: RWTH Aachen University (Germany) and IIT Madras (India)
November 21-23, 2023, IIT Madras, INDIA
 





Call for Papers 
Papers are invited (from early researchers, post-doctoral scholars, Faculty and practitioners), for an International Conference to be held from November 21 to 23, 2023 at the Indian Institute of Technology Madras, Chennai, India. This conference aims to discuss the interplay and adaptation strategies in, and between, the realms of religion and technology in an age of tremendous transformations. Among the transformations, we particularly wish to emphasize the rapid developments with regard to the digital world and the climate, and the considerable global changes and challenges they have produced. We think of ‘religion’ in this context as a key source for value-based solutions, and of ‘technology’ as a specific approach to the world. We regard religion and technology as mirror image twins and thus envisage projects on the changing forms of impacts through both of them.
 
Recent trends in religious studies have emphasized “material religion” - with focus on the material elements of practice rather than just on theological or doctrinal matters. This turn opens up the way for the history of technology productively to intervene in a number of ways. Historians can illuminate the way objects exist in public performances of religious identity and belonging, and the changes in religion and religious practices, riding on technological advances (like online darshans/meditations, social-media channels, online groups, ‘Apps’, etc.). Beyond organized mainstream religions, papers can also look at the interface of technology and the ‘magical’ (acts, spirit possession, black magic), and other so-called 'demonic' work. Others may put the spotlight on the architecture of religious structures, the spiritual character of engineering works, the changing light, sound and other aesthetic elements, and how these changes reshape public participation both in terms of religion and technological usage and challenges. Ethical challenges like loss of privacy, anxiety about the human person’s distinctiveness and dignity, and mankind’s handling of the environment need to be discussed too with regard to increasing digitization and climate change. With the above broad lineaments, proposals can relate themselves to any of the following specific themes:
 
1. Religion and the Digital Worldthe Digital as a method to capture and describe the world and our livelihoods; vast increase around the world in the use of telecommunication and digital technologies for promotion of both traditional and new-age faiths – their increased valency especially amidst the Covid-19-induced restrictions on physical gatherings; ways in which pilgrimages have been transformed due to the new digital facilities (from travel planning to booking darshans); theological/philosophical re-orientations and reflections centered on these new openings.
 
2. Technology and Religion in the Context of Climate Change – possible solutions to the challenge of climate change from religion/theology; their distinctiveness from secular thought/debates; how climate change has impacted on the self-understanding of religions, their dogmatic, social and moral positions; the climate discourse as a modern form of apocalypticism; practical manifestation of ecological sensitivity - influencing the building of mosques, churches, and temples; influence of local communities and indigenous knowledge systems.
 
3. Artificial Intelligence – philosophical and spiritual/theological reflections touching on fundamental questions of Being, Consciousness and the (Post)human; parallelism in the ‘transcendence’ sought to be attained by spiritual efforts/exercises and those wrought by new spatial categories like ‘metaverse’ (going beyond our understandings of the ‘cyberworld’), and other such ontological questions and dilemmas.
 
4. Technology and Religious scholarship/pedagogy from printing press to online theology classes; role of technology in preservation of religious materials and creation of religious repositories like digitisation of palm leaf manuscripts, building devotional hymns database; the regional variations in approach and content; the various innovative practices in creation, delivery and marketing; the subjectivity of technology and its power to include and exclude.
 
5. Representation of Religious-Technological life worlds – in literature, arts and films including science fiction/ climate fiction; representations of knowledge in policies and practices affecting the lives on the ground.
 
In terms of methodology, it is hoped that the various proposals and papers would throw forth a rich mix of different approaches and source materials - including intercultural theology, oral history, decolonizing research methodologies, archival work, textual and media analysis, ethnographic research, social analysis, theoretical formulations and ethical/philosophical reflections.








 
To submit a paper proposal, please send the following information on a single-sided document in English, before 23 May 2023 to ratirdacc23@gmail.com.
  • A provisional Title and the Theme Number it would fit under (nos. 1 to 5 – see above)
  • Full name and academic post/institutional affiliation of the author/s
  • Full postal and email-addresses
  • An outline of about 400 words, highlighting the relevance of the paper to the conference themes, or other forms of interaction between technology and religion, and the main contribution/argument of the proposed paper
  • 5-10 keys words
Information about the acceptance of a paper will be given by end of May 2023 together with guidelines for the paper and its presentation and the Registration fee payment mode. [A nominal registration fee of Rs.500 (15 USD for international participants) is payable].  Complete papers must be received by 25 August 2023. Papers (along with session schedule), will be made available for pre-reading to registered participants. Some of the papers presented at the Conference will be chosen for further expansion and inclusion in a special issue of a relevant journal of high international standing, or in an Edited Volume. (Presentation of paper in the Conference does not automatically guarantee publication).
 
Most of the outstation speakers will be provided accommodation from 20th November to the evening of 24th November 2023 in the IITM Guest House at a nominal cost of Rs 500 to 1000 per night depending on the size and occupancy (single/double) of the room. Participants who are unable to travel can participate online. Travel or other forms of financial assistance, if any, will be announced if adequate funds are raised.
 
TIMELINE
Deadline for submission of Abstracts – May 23 2023
Intimation about selected Abstracts - May 30
Deadline for submission of first Drafts - Aug 25
Conference: Nov 21 - 23, 2023
Intimation about Papers selected for Publication – Dec 3 2023
Resubmission of the selected Papers [for Peer Review] - Jan 10 2024
 
Contact Info: 

John Bosco Lourdusamy
Dept. of Humanities and Social Sciences
IIT Madras, Chennai 600 036, INDIA

Contact Email: