Succession II: Queering the Environment – Rebellion
A NiCHE Series
Proposal Deadline: April 5, 2024
Series Publication: June 2024
Series Editors: Jessica DeWitt, Estraven Lupino-Smith, and Addie Hopes
In ecology, succession is a series of progressive changes made in a community over time. These changes often lead to higher diversity in an environment.
In June 2020, we published the first Succession: Queering the Environment series that explored the changes that occur within environmental history and related environmental studies when queer people, non-humans, systems, and ideas are centred. And in June 2022, we published Succession II, which explored unruliness, care, and pleasure.
Join us for the third installment of this now biennial series for a deeper dive into unruliness, Succession III – Rebellion.
Every year as we approach Pride month this June, the internet buzzes with stories like this recent gem: just a few weeks ago, onlookers captured the first (known) photograph of humpback whales having sex. To their surprise, the frolicking leviathans were both male. The humpbacks join gay penguins, bi chimps, polyamorous gulls, and a litany of non-humans enjoying same-sex trysts, all reminding audiences that nonhumans don’t play by the rules of heteronormativity, homophobia, or binary categorizations of “sex” and “gender.”
From clownfish that change their sexual organs to pregnant male seahorses to the 1500 animal species that partake in same-sex behaviors, nature is inherently queer – and queerness is as natural as it gets. With anti-LGBTQIA2S+ protests on the rise in North America and epidemic levels of violence against trans youth and two spirit peoples still raging on, stories that insist on the normalness of sexual fluidity and the undeniable everyday queerness of ecosystems are not only fun but also integral to the project of queer ecology and the ongoing fight for justice.
For queer theorists, queerness is about more than sex and gender. Queerness challenges normativity itself. It disrupts cis-heteronormative expectations (yes: male whales get it on!) but it also resists the structures of the settler nation-state and the systems of white supremacy, transmisogyny, capitalism, policing and incarceration that sustain it. Seen in this way, the orcas who spent their summer sinking yachts are queer, too.
For this series, we invite submissions that take up ideas of queer rebellion as interruption and resistance.
We seek proposals for Succession III that:
- Respond to the concept of rebellion
- Feature LGBTQIA2S+ folks interacting with and thinking about the environment and non-human animals in the past and present.
- Reimagine environmental topics using queer theory or a related queer lens.
- Are in written in English or French.
Succession III will feature:
- Environmental History
- Environmental Humanities
- Environmental Art
- Queer Ecology
- Related Disciplines
Succession III submissions can take the form of:
- Blog posts (800-1200 words)
- Creative Fiction or Non-Fiction
- Poetry
- Art
- Photo Essays
- Audio and Visual Projects
- Other forms of expression and writing
Submit a 100-300 word proposal describing your proposed submission, how it incorporates or relates to rebellion, and its contribution to the field of environmental history/studies more broadly, as well as a short bio using the Google Form below by April 5, 2024.
Applicants will alerted of their submission status by April 12, 2024. Please email Jessica DeWitt, jessicamariedewitt [at] gmail.com, with any questions or other inquiries.
NiCHE offers $100 CAD honoraria to contributors without adequate or consistent access to institutional support. Learn more about our honoraria policy here.
Feature Image: “Assuming the Ecosexual Position by Beth Stephens & Annie Sprinkle” by NEoN Digital Arts (SCIO) is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0.
Latest posts by Jessica DeWitt (see all)
- #EnvHist Worth Reading: October 2024 - November 18, 2024
- Call for Submissions – From Coulees to Muskeg: A Saskatchewan Environmental History Series - October 15, 2024
- #EnvHist Worth Reading: September 2024 - October 8, 2024
- #EnvHist Worth Reading: August 2024 - September 21, 2024
- #EnvHist Worth Reading: July 2024 - August 15, 2024
- Call for Submissions: Sustainable Publishing Special Issue - July 26, 2024
- Online Event – Demystifying the Hidden Curriculum for New Professors – ASEH Connects - July 17, 2024
- #EnvHist Worth Reading: June 2024 - July 6, 2024
- Online Event – ASEH Connects – Let’s Chat About Communicating Environmental History to the Public - July 5, 2024
- Podcast – Oldman River Watershed - June 24, 2024