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[ecrea] "New histories of communication study" preconference, ICA 2013
Wed Nov 07 01:51:48 GMT 2012
New Histories of Communication Study
International Communication Association Preconference
London, June 16-17, 2013
Sponsor: ICA Communication History Interest Group
Co-Sponsors: ECREA Communication History Section and IAMCR History Section
Organizers: David W. Park and Peter Simonson
This preconference seeks to broaden, internationalize, and advance the
history of communication study as a family of overlapping configurations
and practices. It aims to bring together scholars from ICA, ECREA,
IAMCR, NCA, and select rhetoric societies in an effort to stoke new,
cross-national and cross-field conversations about the study of
communication in long and broad historicalperspective. It aspires to
push the empirical and theoretical boundaries of histories and
pre-histories of the field by attending to overlooked research areas,
emerging conceptual orientations, and new axes of understanding and
comparison among distinct traditions cutting across communication, media
studies, cultural studies, journalism, and rhetoric, among other
fields—and across institutional, intellectual, social, cultural,
discursive, and material history. More specifically, it takes as its aims:
(1) To further internationalize the history of the fields and subfields
of communication through papers that
a. are centered on world regions or nations that have received
relatively little historical attention to this point;
b. are focused on the history of trans-national flows of influence,
ideas, paradigms, texts, methods, research technologies, people,
politics, power, other agentic forces contributing to the study of
communication in the past; or
c. take up comparative analysis across nations or regions.
(2) To deepen, enrich, and empirically fill out the history of
communication study through papers that
a. throw light on understudied dimensions of the academic study of
communication as it developed over time;
b. make use of archival materials, oral histories, or other primary
sources that have not found their way into the published history of the
field to date, or have been underused;
c. advance a social history of the field that goes beyond ‘great men,’
landmark texts, and dominant forms of research—drawing attention, e.g.,
to patterns of labor, ordinary practitioners, pedagogical texts and
practices, and points of articulation with everyday life and with
publics beyond the academy;
d. provide institutional histories of important departments, journals,
and professional associations
e. apply historical consideration to domains that have received less
attention than some other subfields in the extant historiography of the
field, including: internet studies, interpersonal communication
research, forgotten avenues of communication research, marginal
formations of all kinds, and more;
f. bring newer or under-utilized theoretical paradigms and analytic
frameworks to bear on the history of the field—e.g. new materialisms,
archaeology, post-colonial and critical race theory, feminist theory,
and queer theory; or
g. critically engage existing histories and revise dominant
understandings of individuals, institutions, ideas, schools, and practices.
(3) To broaden and cross-fertilize the history of communication study
and related academic and non-academic fields through papers that
a. consider commercial, governmental, philanthropic, religious,
therapeutic, or other non-academic versions of the study of
communication as a family of social practices; or
b. draw out points of intellectual or socio-historical connection among
communication-related fields whose histories and presents have often
been kept separate of one another—e.g. rhetoric, hermeneutics, literary
studies, journalism studies/Zeitungwissenschaft, information, media
studies, cultural studies, and social scientific communication research.
Abstracts of 300 words (maximum) should be submitted no later than 15
November 2012. Send abstracts to: David Park at (park /at/ lakeforest.edu)
Authors will be informed regarding acceptance/rejection for the
preconference no later than December 15, 2012. In an effort to
facilitate informed discussion of papers, the organizers hope to have
the papers for this preconference posted online. For this reason, full
papers will need to be submitted no later than May 15, 2013.
This preconference will be held at LondonMetropolitan University. The
organizers wish to thank Sheila Lodge for providing access to these
facilities
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ECREA - European Communication Research and Education Association
Postal address:
ECREA
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