lockard on 23 Aug 2000 22:46:08 -0000 |
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[Nettime-bold] Bad Subjects -- Calls for Papers |
BAD SUBJECTS: Politics of Everyday Life CALL FOR PAPERS 2000-2001 Bad Subjects is seeking short, accessible essays relating to the politics of everyday life. Essays should be short (around 3000 words) and should be written in accessible and jargon-free prose. Writing that combines practical issues with theoretical consideration will be especially appreciated. Feel free to query issue editors on essay proposals. Visit the journal at http://eserver.org/bs/ Issue topics for 2000-2001 include: * Spirits * Improper Intellectuals * Alienated Labor * Strangers * Garbage * BOOGIE! SPIRITS -- Bad Subjects #51 We are continuously surrounded by the image, suggestion, and even presence of spirits. Perhaps someone gave you a boxing alien doll for your birthday, or your mother channels on weekends, or you are a day-trading slave to the sinister "invisible hand." A spirit can be something undead, something all-too-dead, or magic that guides the living. Depending on your perspective, we have an overabundance of spirits in our everyday lives, or an underabundance. In overabundance, we have the spirit of capitalism -- no longer in the form of the Protestant ethic -- but in the form of a god-like deus-ex-machina to be revered, not explained. Inexplicable phenomena make for good popular cultural fare, even with the X-Files' ratings on the decline. Even the human genome could be thought of as a map of the human spirit. But at the same time the contemporary popularity of irony and cynicism among the cultured bourgeoisie point to an age devoid of spirit -- of course they also point to the spirit of the age. Subjects for consideration might include: Zeitgeists; poltergeists; the spirit of revolution; the dead; wine and other spirits; school spirit; aether; marginal experiences; science and the spirit world; The Skeptical Enquirer; the Tao, feelings of debt, loss, or grief; spirit photography; radio waves; spirituality; psychic phenomena; trips through time; disembodied beings; angel cards; millennial movements; qi, graveyards; the alien fetish; or credit (perhaps the defining spectre of our era). Deadline for submissions is September 7, 2000. Send submissions to issue editors Jonathan Sterne <jsterne+@pitt.edu> and Megan Shaw Prelinger <alysons@earthlink.net>. IMPROPER INTELLECTUALS -- Bad Subjects #52 Walter Benjamin once bitterly described the condition of being an intellectual as the experience of a perpetual state of homelessness. "The problematic situation of intellectuals," Benjamin argued, leads them to question their own right to exist because society consistently denies them the means to exist, i.e. easy access to respectable forms of employment whose middle class status is simply unquestionable. While Benjamin's beliefs were rooted in his own difficult personal experiences of having his dissertation rejected, and an inability to find proper employment doing what he did best - writing; nonetheless, Benjamin extrapolated from his circumstances that there is a certain lack of cultural value placed upon intellectual activity that ideally culiminates in an experience of political radicalization. In the Improper Intellectuals issue, Bad Subjects would like to invite contributors to explore Benjamin's thesis. Is the alienating experience of being an intellectual really all that radicalizing? For that matter, what's so alienating about intellectual life anyway? Go nuts. Submissions to issue editors Joel Schalit <riotgoy@ix.netcom.com> and Geoff Sauer <gsauer@cmu.edu> due October 17, 2000. ALIENATED LABOR -- Bad Subjects #53 For Marx, capitalism represented "the domination of thing over man, of dead labor over living labor, of the product over the producer." It's a formulation worth recalling in this era of globalization, when mainstream pundits paint the free market as a fountain of youth. And it's one that the activists who participated in the "Battle in Seattle" and subsequent protests against the WTO, World Bank, and other institutions have taken to heart, whatever their position on Marxism. The Alienated Labor issue takes Marx's formulation as the starting point for an exploration of the nature and manifestations of working people's alienation under capitalism. How do we confront and contend with work that we realize is for the benefit of the "prosperous few?" How do we organize workplaces to reclaim the fruits of labor for ourselves? How do we combat the alienation of life energies at work, at home, and on the streets? This issue invites essays on the politics of labor; labor organizing drives and activism; malcontent workers; non-compliance, disobedience, sabotage, work actions and strikes; identity politics and labor; "illegal" labor (like that of undocumented workers or prostitutes); migrant labor; unemployment; working at home and telecommuting; 9-to-5 dead-end jobs; mental health and work; occupational health; bad bosses and tyranny in the workplace; the "disappearance of labor" in consumer economies; laboring for a survival wage; the anomie that comes with meaningless work; and other related topics. Contact issue co-editors Charlie Bertsch at <cbertsch@u.arizona.edu> and Joe Lockard at <lockard@socrates.berkeley.edu> if you are interested in contributing. The deadline for finished articles will be November 28, 2000. STRANGERS - Bad Subjects #54 There are strangers in our midst. Every day we deal with people who are to varying degrees unfamiliar to us. Often these interactions take place without much awareness on our part: they barely register on our social radar screen. We buy groceries from complete strangers, exchange pleasantries about the weather with them, or simply pass them on the street -- all without giving it as much as a second thought. But at other times, the strangers in our midst become the focus of our attention, eliciting from us strong responses loaded with political meaning. With hot heads and anxious hearts we denounce the influx of 'foreigners' and 'aliens' into our communities, calling for their expulsion, incarceration or marginalization. Or, in a move equally fraught with political and cultural significance, we travel to the opposite end of the spectrum and eagerly embrace strangers, treating them as fetishes upon which to project our innermost desires and fantasies. And, of course, sometimes the shoe is on the other foot and we find ourselves playing the part of the stranger, when, for example, we travel to another country, interact with a cultural scene different from our own or simply drive through a new neighborhood. Possible topics might include: the marking of certain groups as 'strange'; the definition of strangers, aliens, and foreigners in the politics of immigration and multiculturalism; travel and the experience of being a stranger; personal experiences of feeling strange, odd, and out of place; aliens and extraterrestrials; the stranger in film, literature, and other types of pop culture; discrimination against strangers; exotic strangers; threatening strangers; strangers and fear. Deadline for submissions is January 23, 2001. Send submissions to issue editors John Brady <jsbrady@socrates.berkeley.edu> or Steven Rubio <srubio@hooked.net>. GARBAGE -- Bad Subjects #55 Today we live in a world were consumption of innumerable products continues to grow. With each new product or market niche discovered and exploited, the capitalist law of designed obsolescence becomes more apparent. Everything we buy ends up in a landfill coming to a low-income neighborhood near -- but not too near -- you. What is the role of garbage in our world today? Is there such a thing as garbage in the material sense, or as demonstrated by the intense rise in collectibles of every sort over the past five years, has capitalism managed to turn its waste into something other than garbage? What then are the new disposables of the 21st century? Is garbage now confined to immaterial social institutions and beliefs once viewed as indispensable? Property values now matter more than accessible housing. Profits for share holders take precedence over stable labor markets and wages that maintain a quality standard of living. What is the status of family? Friendship? Love? Parenting? Charity? Ethics? This is not an old-fashioned argument for right-wing Christian family values. Rather it is a query to explore the interrelationship of the continual rise of material commodities to the point where almost everything that's physical is potentially a sacred material commodity and the seeming restructuring of the immaterial as expendable, unimportant, irrelevant -- garbage. What is garbage today -- and why? Deadline for submission is March 6, 2001. Send submissions to issue editor Robert Soza <r_soza@uclink4.berkeley.edu>. BOOGIE! -- Bad Subjects #56 More than just music, BOOGIE! suggests its expression through dance, an attitude, assertion and a way of moving. "Boogie" depends on *beat,* which, in the broader sense, reflects and may drive the rhythms of our behavior outside the disco. To cover the sound, the groove and fingerpoppin' of daily life, we seek analysis of the progressive, regressive and repressive in Punk, Rap, Dance, Pop, Country, Crossover Classical, and other, underexamined or unfashionable, musical forms. Replay the politics of music and power, music sold to us, music taken from or by us, musics and communities, music's facilitating technologies, that insistent beat and the power-chord moments when music helped us make political sense of this mystifying world.