CfP: The Material Realities of Energy Histories: A Call for Proposals for a Special Issue of the Canadian Journal of History/Annales canadiennes d’histoire (CJH/ACH)
The
appropriation and control of the flow of energy from the sun and stocks
of energy stored beneath the surface of the Earth influenced changes to
human societies in the past. Ideology, cultural norms, scientific
knowledge, and technology informed how people used energy, and the use
of energy transformed relationships between people, and between humans
and the natural world. Over time, people devised more efficient ways of
harnessing and directing energy, while at the same time breaking the
constraints of older patterns of use by adopting new energy sources and
fuels. And despite moments of scarcity or crisis, the scale of energy
used by humans has always tended toward ever-greater amounts.
Energy
history has grown considerably from a largely overlooked sub-field to
an important and relevant line of historical enquiry. Responding to the
realization that human energy use has been directly responsible for
monumental social, cultural, political, economic, and environmental
changes, such as industrialization, urbanization, global warming, and
the onset of the Anthropocene, historians have begun to embrace the need
to understand better how energy structured human societies.
The Canadian Journal of History/Annales canadiennes d’histoire
is pleased to welcome abstracts of articles for a special issue on
energy history. The proposed essays should explore topics that address
the transnational dimensions and multiple scales of the material
realities and environmental consequences of energy production,
distribution, and consumption in any time period. Authors of accepted
abstracts will be invited to submit full article manuscripts for
double-blind peer review.
Possible themes may include, but are not limited to:
- energy sources/fuels/commodities
- energy networks/infrastructure
- efforts to connect sites of energy production and consumption
- industrialization, urbanization, transportation, resource development, agriculture
- energy abundance/scarcity
- energy justice/inequality
- energy regimes/transitions
- households/consumer culture
- transformations of environment/landscape
Those interested should send a 250-300 word abstract by 2 June 2017 to the attention of guest editor Andrew Watson (cjh@usask.ca). Invited authors will be asked to submit a full article manuscript for peer review by 15 September 2017.
Want more information about our submissions process? Visit http://bit.ly/CJHSubmit_HNET to learn more!