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*Apologies for cross-posting*

*CALL FOR PAPERS: AAG 2019*


*Picturing power: Innovative visual methods in critical geographies *

Session organizers:

Noelani Eidse (McGill University) [log in to unmask]

Melody Lynch (University of Melbourne) [log in to unmask]



*Submission deadline: 20 October 2018*


“The very heart of geography—the search for our sense of place and self in
the world—is constituted by the practice of looking and is, in effect, a
study of images”

-Aitken and Zonn, 1994: 7

For centuries, geography-art relations have shaped the ways in which we
imagine and know the world (Hawkins, 2013). Yet, only in recent years have
geographers acknowledged the ways in which the discipline depends upon
visualities—saturated with power relations—for knowledge production (Rose,
2003). Empirically, visual methods move beyond discursive representations
of lived experiences, aiming instead to facilitate collaborative knowledge
production, increase participants’ tools for self-representation and
balance power in researcher-respondent relationships. Visual methods can
lend analytical insight, for example, into the everyday politics of
marginalized populations, and can give voices to otherwise unheard groups,
thus extending a type of citizenship (Matless, 1996), as done in youth
(Jeffrey and Dyson, 2008), queer (Zebracki, 2017; Browne et al., 2017),
feminist (Kindon, 2003; McIntyre, 2003), cultural (Cresswell, 2009), and
political (Peluso, 1995) geographies.

Since the acceleration of the ‘visual turn’ in the early 2000s, visual
methods have become increasingly recognized as powerful tools for both
geographical thought and practice (Thornes, 2004). A wide range of visual
approaches to geography have been developed, including photovoice (Wang,
1999; McIntyre, 2003; Castleden et al., 2007); film (Kindon, 2003; Garrett,
2010); portraits (Jeffrey and Dyson, 2008); comic strips (Dittmer, 2010);
mapping (Elwood, 2011; Kim, 2015); counter mapping (Peluso, 1995);
bricolage (Zebracki, 2017); and other visual art forms (Mackenzie; 2006;
Crang, 2010). Visual methods not only serve as empirical entry points to
conceptual inquiry, but can also offer innovative analytical frameworks to
geographical thought and practice. The incorporation of visual tools within
research praxis, can likewise contribute to more effective research
dissemination across disciplines and beyond academe to engage with
policymakers, industry and everyday people.


*Submissions: *This session aims to explore diverse visual methodologies
and their applications for critical geographic thought and practice.
Specifically, we encourage submissions that incorporate voices from
socially, politically or economically ‘marginal’ populations and explore
the use of visual methods as a platform for self-representation and
expression. We welcome submissions addressing visual methodologies in
relation to the following (and other) themes in global north and/or south
contexts:


·      Power relations, identity and positionality

·      Expressions of (shadow) citizenship and belonging (Cresswell, 2009)

·      Everyday politics (Kerkvliet, 1990)

·      Daily survival strategies, subaltern urbanisms and and informality
(Roy, 2011)

·      (Im)mobilities

·      Collaborative knowledge production

·      Self-representation and embodied experiences

·      Innovation in knowledge production praxis and the ‘mechanics’ of
visual methodologies

·      Reflections on the challenges, limitations and ethics of visual
methods

We value contributions from community organizers, practitioners, activists
and researchers. We encourage submissions from individuals who identify as
members of marginalized communities, including people identifying as
LGBT*QI, Indigenous people, people of color, people with disabilities.
Building on our AAG session, we aim to put together a special issue on
visual methodologies in critical geographies.


To participate in this session, please submit an abstract by October 20th to
both organizers at: [log in to unmask] and
[log in to unmask] Submissions should in PDF or Microsoft Word
form, and must include an abstract (maximum 250 words), and should be
accompanied by a title, five key words, in addition to author(s) name,
affiliation and contact information (including email). Feel free to contact
the organizers if you have any questions. All submissions will be
acknowledged by email; if you do not receive a response within 48 hours
please try sending again.


References


   - Aitken, S. and Zonn, L. (1994). Place, power, situation and spectacle:
   a geography of film. Rowman and Littlefield: Totowa, NJ.
   - Browne, Kath, Niharika Banerjea, Nick McGlynn, Sumita B., Leela
   Bakshi, Rukmini Banerjee & Ranjita Biswas (2017).Towards transnational
   feminist queer methodologies. Gender, Place & Culture, 24(10), 1376-1397.
   - Castleden, H., Garvin, T., and Huu-ay-aht, First Nation (2007).
   Modifying photovoice for community-based participatory indigenous
research. Social
   Science & Medicine.
   - Crang, M. (2010). Visual Methods and Methodologies. In: The Sage
   Handbook of Qualitative Geography (Eds: D. Delyser, S. Herbert, S. Aitken,
   M. Crang, and L. McDowell). London: Sage, 208–225.
   - Cresswell, T. (2009). The prosthetic citizen: New geographies of
   citizenship. In Political power and social theory (pp. 259-273). Emerald
   Group Publishing Limited.
   - Dittmer, J. (2010). Comic Book Visualities: A Methodological Manifesto
   on Geography, Montage and Narration. Transactions of the Institute of
   British Geographers 35(2), 222–236.
   - Elwood, S. (2011) Geographic Information Science: Visualization,
   Visual Methods, and the Geoweb.Progress in Human Geography,35(3):
   401–408.
   - Garrett, B. (2010). Videographic geographies: using digital video for
   geographic research.
   - Hawkins, H. (2013). For Creative Geographies: Geography, Visual Arts
   and the Making of Worlds. London: Routledge.
   - Jeffrey, C. and Dyson, J. (2008). Telling Young Lives: Portraits in
   Global Youth. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
   - Kim, A. (2015). Sidewalk City: Re-Mapping Public Space in Ho Chi Minh
   City. University of Chicago Press.Kindon, S. (2003). Participatory video
   in geographic research: a feminist practice of looking? Area, 35(2),
   142-153.
   - Mackenzie, A. Fiona D. (2006). ‘Against the Tide’: Placing Visual Art
   in the Highlands and Islands, Scotland. Social and Cultural Geography,7(6):
   965–985.
   - Matless, D., (1996). Visual culture and geographical citizenship:
   England in the 1940s. Journal of Historical Geography, 22(4), 424-439.
   - McIntyre, A. (2003) Through the eyes of women: Photovoice and
   participatory research as tools for reimagining place. Gender, Place and
   Culture, 10(1): 47-66.
   - Peluso, N. L. (1995). Whose woods are these? Counter-mapping forest
   territories in Kalimantan, Indonesia. Antipode,27(4): 383-406.
   - Rose, G. (2003). On the need to Ask How, Exactly, Is Geography
   ‘Visual’? Antipode, 35(2). 212–221.
   - Roy, A. (2011). Slumdog cities: Rethinking subaltern urbanism.
International
   journal of urban and regional research, 35(2), 223-238.
   - Thornes, J.E. (2004). The Visual Turn and Geography (Response to Rose
   2003 Intervention). Antipode, 36(5).
   - Wang, Caroline (1999). Photovoice: A Participatory Action Research
   Strategy Applied to Women’s Health. Journal of Women’s Health, 8(2).
   - Zebracki, Martin. (2017). Queer Bricolage. ACME: An International
   Journal for Critical Geographies, 16(3), 605-606.

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*Noelani K. X. Eidse*, *BA Hon.*
*PhD Candidate*
Department of Geography
McGill University
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Burnside Hall, Room 705
805 Sherbrooke Street West
Montreal, Quebec
H3A 0B9
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Email: [log in to unmask]
Web: www.neidse.com
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Find me on: Academia.edu  <https://mcgill.academia.edu/NoelaniEidse>|
ResearchGate <https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Noelani_Eidse> | Google
Scholar <https://scholar.google.ca/citations?user=-ZM0qwoAAAAJ&hl=en&oi=ao>

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