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Unfeeling

Unfeeling CFP

On this page you can find our calls for academic papers, book reviews, and creative writing submissions responding to 'Unfeeling', the theme for the 2022 issue of Moveable Type.

Unfeeling: Call for Academic Papers

鈥楿nfeeling鈥 in relation to literature may evoke thoughts about depictions of cold-hearted characters, or repressive worlds in dystopian literature. It may also evoke the supposedly 鈥渆motionless鈥 character of disinterested responses to art and literature, and of data-driven distant reading techniques. Affect and reader-response theories tell us that our feelings matter when we read, but which feelings have historically been prioritised and at whose expense?

This call for papers encourages researchers to explore emotion and feeling through the lens of unfeeling: that is, unfeeling as a deliberate approach or stance as adopted by audiences, writers and critics. Papers might explore how unfeeling results in disinterested or indifferent attitudes and aesthetics - from the cool to the careless - or strategies and practices that avoid or disencourage empathetic readings, emotivity or embodiment. They may also consider how such approaches might produce modes of resistance, receptivity, or even humour, among other things. We particularly encourage contributors to discuss texts in light of Xine Yao鈥檚 Disaffected (2021), a pertinent monograph which illuminates how 鈥榰niversal feeling is a ruse when only some feelings are privileged as true鈥 (210).

Among the questions we are interested in are: how might unfeeling be adopted as a mode of resistance by writers from marginalized and/or potentially minoritized groups? How should critics write about reader response when feelings and affective responses cannot be universalised? When do literary critics choose to be unfeeling; and what are the consequences of that? How might biopower manifest itself in literary criticism? How might unfeeling allow us to access a non-anthropocentric understanding of the 鈥榠nanimate鈥: objects, things, concepts, and worlds? Do poems鈥攁 genre once associated with an overflow of emotion鈥攑resent other modes of being for non-humans that do not revolve around feeling, or might other forms and genres achieve this too? How might sentimentalism have been, and perhaps, continue to be recruited for colonial, national or literary projects? What are the political possibilities of unfeeling?听

More potential topics for exploration:听

  • The adoption of unfeeling as a mode of resistance听听
  • (Un)feeling in narratives about race, disability, the climate crises, and the refugee crisis.听
  • The medicalisation of feeling /unfeeling
  • Assumptions about the sub-literary nature of texts that depict certain feelings and the readers/readings which respond to them
  • Depictions of unfeeling characters (past and present)
  • Political / literary apathy and its usefulness; or investigations of how different modes of literary criticism resist the culture of apathy or desensisitation
  • What does mean it for writing to be done carefully or, conversely, carelessly - to intend to be tactless, offensive or hurtful
  • Anti-relational readings in queer theory (Lee Edelman) and focusing on potential futures instead (Jose Esteban Munoz)
  • What might be distinctive about queer unfeeling, or unfeeling as a means of self-defence, or as a subversion of heteronormative sentimentalism?
  • The non-universality of feelings听
  • How does unfeeling look in earlier texts e.g. in the Victorian Age or alongside the eighteenth-century sentimental novel?
  • The use of humour in disability narratives
  • 听Objects and 'unfeeling' things in past and present literatures

Academic articles should be 3000-5000 words. All submissions should use MHRA style referencing, and include a bibliography and an author bio. We encourage close-reading of literary texts as much as thematic exploration. We welcome contributions exploring any genre and time period.

Please send completed submissions to editors.moveabletype@gmail.com. Feel free to get in touch to briefly discuss your article topic prior to submission.听

Deadline: 22nd March.

Unfeeling: Call for Book and Film Reviews听

We are also seeking reviews of poetry, novels, plays, film adaptations, and critical monographs relating to the theme of unfeeling. Ideally, texts for review should have been published in the last two-three years.

Suggestions for review:听

Cathy Park Hong鈥檚 Minor Feelings (2020)

Patricia Lockwood鈥檚 Nobody is Talking About This (2021)

Xine Yao鈥檚 Disaffected (2021)

Tom谩拧 Jirsa鈥檚 Disformations: Affects, Media, Literature (2021)

Peter Gizzi, (2021)

Adam Curtis鈥 Can鈥檛 Get You Out of My Head (2021)听

Alex Houen鈥檚 Affect and Literature (2020)

Abdulrazak Gurnah鈥檚 Afterlives (2020)

Kaye Mitchell鈥檚 Writing Shame (2019)

Natasha Brown鈥檚 Assembly (2021)

Raven Leilani鈥檚 Luster (2020)

Moses Sumney鈥檚 albums Aromanticism (2018) and 驳谤忙 (2020)

Fred Moten鈥檚 consent not to be a single being (2018), particularly its final volume, The Universal Machine

Please feel free to contact us at editors.moveabletype@gmail.com to discuss a potential review. We typically ask reviewers to request review copies from publishers if necessary.听

Reviews should be 1500-2000 words. All submissions should use MHRA style referencing and include an author bio, an abstract, and a bibliography. Please send completed submissions to editors.moveabletype@gmail.com.

Deadline: 22nd March.

Unfeeling: Call for Creative Writing Submissions听

Moveable Type invites submissions of your creative nonfiction, poetry, fiction and drama relating to the theme of unfeeling for its Autumn 2022 issue.听

We welcome submissions about:听

  • Climate change narratives听
  • The ruse of universal feelings
  • Shame
  • Sympathy, or a lack thereof
  • The medicalization of feeling听
  • Biopower听
  • Apathy and/or despair听
  • Unfeeling characters听
  • Spaces of unfeeling听
  • Perceiving and interacting with the world in the absence of feeling听
  • Alternative modes of being which do not revolve around feeling
  • Transcendentalism
  • Mechanical automation听

Creative submissions should be 2500 words at most. All submissions should use MHRA style referencing where necessary and include a bibliography (if necessary) and a short author bio. Please send completed submissions to editors.moveabletype@gmail.com.听

Deadline: 22nd March.