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[ecrea] ECREA Communication History
Tue Mar 05 21:42:19 GMT 2013
Call for Papers: “History of the Media in Transition Periods”
4-6 September 2013
Lisbon, Catholic University of Portugal
Convergence and digitalization have become buzz-words employed to
demonstrate how technological change has impacted on the media and
is reconfiguring today’s media systems. Accordingly, media research
in the last decade has centered itself on the contemporary changes
operated on and by the new media sometimes over-estimating the
transitions that are taking place and not acknowledging common
patterns that can be found between the emergence of new media and
the appearance of other means of communication in previous decades.
In fact, instead of being something new brought by digitalization,
moments of technological transition can easily be found in many
historical periods namely throughout the 20th century. While today
the internet and new media are inducing new patters of media
consumption, back in the 1920s radio broadcasting facilitated change
in everyday life by bringing entertainment into the homes while in
the 1950s television also enabled new patterns of media consumption
inside the home.
The increased interest in understanding today’s new media can be
explained by the seductive power of “the new” which leads scholars
to interpret contemporary transitions as being the most profound in
history. For example, it is now frequently claimed that new media
play a crucial role in changing social habits, economic structures
and even political regimes. Whatever about the past, in today’s
culture there is increasing concern and attention focused on the
media’s active role in transition periods, i.e. during periods of
discontinuity. When thinking about economic or political crisis, or
even in war periods or regime changes, the media have been active
players in mediating the new reality and promoting the discussion on
the public sphere besides being used as instruments of cultural
diplomacy.
Having this background in mind, the ECREA Communication History
Section intends to discuss the role of the media in transition
periods either these are technological, political, economic, social
or cultural transitions. Thus, the Section invites contributions
from scholars who are interested in topics related to this theme and
who can present papers and engage in the discussion at its 2013
workshop in Lisbon that with be organized in collaboration with the
research line “Media, Technology, Contexts” of the Research Centre
for Communication and Culture. Extended abstracts (500 words max.),
for a 15 minute presentation, can be submitted by e-mail to:
(ecreacomhistory /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(ecreacomhistory /at/ gmail.com)> until
17 March 2013, focusing (but not limited to) the following topics:
• Media and technological change
• The emergence of new media (popular press, film, radio,
television, internet)
• The role of the media in regime transitions or political
change (emergence of authoritarian regimes,
implementation of democracy, political shifts inside a
particular regime)
• The media in periods of uncertainty (economic
transitions, social upraises, war periods)
• Past economic crisis and their impact on media and
journalism
• Media and the creation or alteration of social habits
• Changes in audience behavior and consumer/audience
identities
• Mass Communication in the two World Wars or in the Inter-
War Crises (Russian Revolution and Rise of Fascist and
National Socialist Regimes)
• The role of the media in the Cold War
• Media change in specific European 'regions' or geo-
political formations
• Theories and conceptualizations of media change in
transition periods
• To what extent is historical understanding and
explanation becoming increasingly techno-centric or media-
centric?
The ECREA Communication History Section is also planning to publish
a handbook with the aim of providing a coherent set of contributions
which yield a well-structured and relevant overview of European mass
media history and so provide a platform for more transnational
perspectives on relevant historical developments. The he workshop in
Lisbon will also provide an opportunity to advance the Section's
interests and plans for handbooks and other texts related to
overviews of European media and communication history.
All abstracts submitted will be subject to peer-review. Authors will
be notified by 14 April 2013. Both ECREA members and non-members can
submit extended abstracts to the workshop.
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