CFP for issue on Problematizing Cyber Wars

CyberOrient: Online Journal of the Virtual Middle East has issued a Call for Papers for a special issue on Problematizing Cyber Wars.
Submissions are due January 31, 2015 for Full Papers.

According to military analysts, since the 1991 Gulf War and even more so since the Hezbollah-Israel 2006 war, we have entered a new phase of warfare, in which kinetic and traditional military power are losing importance to symbolic and media power. Perhaps unsurprisingly given a still-widely held Orientalist view in military circles, many such perspectives revolve around wars and conflicts in the ‘Middle East’ or against ‘Islam’ more broadly – taking place in Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, Israel/Palestine, Syria, but also on cyber networks and mobile phones.

While these claims are of course hyperbole, this special issue of CyberOrient invites articles on questions of how we might define wars
in a (new) media-age in the region; whether, why, and how (new) media are increasingly sites of warfare; the relationships between ‘virtual’ and ‘real’ battlespaces. Topics could include the significance of targeting (and bombing) telecommunications and media infrastructures; the use of (new) media as outlets for propaganda during wartime; the mediatization of war and the militarization of media; the role of participatory or social media and mobile communications during and in wars; relationships or differences between official, military, alternative, citizen, and grass-roots (new) media uses during war and conflict; the expanding definition of warzones; commemoration and memorialization of war in a digital age; among others. We welcome submissions from across disciplines and methodological approaches that are empirically and critically grounded.

CyberOrient (http://www.cyberorient.net/) is a peer-reviewed journal published by the American Anthropological Association, in
collaboration with the Faculty of Arts of Charles University in Prague. The aim of the journal is to provide research and theoretical
considerations on the representation of Islam and the Middle East, the very areas that used to be styled as an “Orient”, in cyberspace, as
well as the impact of the internet and new media in Muslim and Middle Eastern contexts.

Articles should be submitted directly to Helga Tawil-Souri (helga@nyu.edu) and Vit Sisler (vit.sisler@ff.cuni.cz). Article should
be between 6,000 and 8,000 words (including references), and follow the AAA style in referencing and citations. Upon acceptance, articles will be published online with free access in spring 2015.

More information can be found here: http://www.cyberorient.net/detail.do?articleId=3682