Call for papers – Philosophy of Food

*CALL for PAPERS*

(8.2) Special Topics Issue: Philosophy of Food (Fall/Winter 2013)

Lead Editors: Tracey Nicholls and Chloe Taylor
Submissions are due: April 1, 2013
Contact: Tracey Nicholls (tracey.j.nicholls@gmail.com)

(9.1) Annual Open Issue (Spring/Summer 2014)
Submissions are due September 1, 2013.  For more information contact lead Editor: Elodie Boublil
 (elodie.boublil@mail.mcgill.ca)Numéro annuel non-thématique (Printemps/Eté 2014)

Les soumissions sont dues au 1er septembre 2013.  Pour tout renseignement, contacter les Editeurs en chef, Elodie Boublil (elodie.boublil@mail.mcgill.ca)

(9.2) Special Topics Issue: Judgment and Embodiment(Fall/Winter 2014) Editors: Alexis Shotwell (Carleton University) and Ada Jaarsma (Mount Royal University) Feminist judgements about embodiment tend to be normative, identifying and undermining social prescriptions about bodily practices that limit flourishing and intensify oppression; conversely, feminist judgements are also often pragmatic, modeling forms of embodiment that aspire to emancipatory ways of living in the world. Embodiment can be seen, then, as an object of critique as well as a method of transformative critique, and both aspects of embodiment are animated by modes of judgement. Bodily practices that align with feminist resistance may make new capacities of judgement possible: for example, the cultivation of senses that are allergic to prejudicial forms of power and are attuned to non-oppressive relational dynamics. Might we affirm judgement itself as an embodied practice? Such a claim would be somewhat at odds with prevailing liberal scripts about judgement which warn us that judging another’s bodily practices might be impolite or impolitic. Existential and phenomenological approaches to critical theory call such liberal formulations into question, making way for more open-ended and positive conceptions of the intersections of judgement with embodiment. This special issue will elaborate and explore the problem of embodiment, specifically from the vantage point of feminist concerns about domination and discrimination, on the one hand, and creative and affirmative becoming, on the other. We are especially interested in articles that reflect on particular—or even exemplary—cases that stage the problem of judgement and embodiment.

Deadline: April 1, 2014

Papers should be prepared for anonymous review and can be sent to Alexis Shotwell( alexis_shotwell@carleton.ca)
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http://www.phaenex.uwindsor.ca/ojs/leddy/index.php/phaenex/about/submissions/callforpapers

Phaenex

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Christiane

Coordonatrice du Centre de justice sociale de l'Université Concordia (Montréal) - Coordinator Social Justice Centre (Concordia University, Montreal)

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