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[ecrea] 40th IIS World Congress in Delhi - Call for Papers: Panel “Theorizing the Public Sphere in a digitized globality”
Wed Jun 29 15:07:56 GMT 2011
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The 40th IIS World Congress in Delhi
After Western Hegemony: Social Science and its Publics
February 16-19, 2012
Organized by the Centre for the Study of Developing Societies (CSDS),
Delhi &
Swedish Collegium for Advanced Study (SCAS), Uppsala
Call for Papers: Panel “Theorizing the Public Sphere in a digitized
globality”
Theme:
In current social scientific research as well as in the public discourse
some well-established themes seem to be converging: globalization,
localization, mediatization and digitization are being increasingly
theorized as interrelated and interdependent processes. At the same
time, researchers are trying to find out whether the classic (Western)
notion of the public sphere – as the theoretical and empirical
foundation of a democratic commonwealth – can be adapted and adopted
against the backdrop of our digital age. The proliferation and
popularity of digital and increasingly mobile media, laptops and
netbooks, mobile phones but also social networks like Facebook, Twitter
and the like thoroughly change the face of our media and how we make use
of them. This poses the question if such new techno-economic structures
and changing social practices might bring about a Global Public Sphere?
This development extends to at least three dimensions: a) the dimension
of (technically facilitated) connectivity and thus to the question
whether or not such new opportunities are accessible and actually used
for transnational communication. b) The dimension of common topics – and
thus an increased cultural reservoir of meaning that may be related to
globally. Since, c) the public sphere has traditionally been connected
with a specific political scope or space, the question is raised if the
public sphere still pertains to political elements in a (world) society.
Does politics continue to form the constitutive element of a global
public sphere, or – contrary to this perspective – are they of
diminishing relevance and get replaced by other themes, topics and
discourses (such as popular culture, global marketing and advertising,
mediated-interpersonal communication)?
Possible questions for papers include:
If we understand the public sphere as the sum total of active and
passive participants in communication regarding matters of collective
concern – how has it changed in the light of these new developments and
what is its future? Does this notion still hold analytic value? Are we
witnessing the emergence of a global public sphere? What is the role of
the classic (mass) media in this process? What are the
hindrances/drivers of such a development? Do we need a (new) ethic for
global communication, and what could it look like?
Paper proposals
We invite paper proposals to discuss these and related questions with
participants from all countries, cultures and disciplines. Please send
your extended abstracts (max. 800 words) to the panel convenors (see
below) by August 25, 2011. Proposals will be peer reviewed, authors
notified by September 25, 2011. Conference website:
www.scasss.uu.se/iis/iis2012/regular_sessions.html
<http://www.scasss.uu.se/iis/iis2012/regular_sessions.html>
Organizers:
Marian Adolf, Dr phil, Associate Professor of Media Culture at Zeppelin
University in Friedrichshafen (Germany). Research interests include the
Sociology of the Media, Cultural Theory and Critical Media studies.
(marian.adolf /at/ zeppelin-university.de)
<mailto:(marian.adolf /at/ zeppelin-university.de)>
Cornelia Wallner, Dr phil, Post-Doc researcher at Ludwig Maximilians
University in Munich (Germany); specializes in research on the Public
Sphere, Media Systems and Media Quality measurement. (wallner /at/ ifkw.lmu.de)
<mailto:(wallner /at/ ifkw.lmu.de)>
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