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[ecrea] Cfp - New Media, Global Activism and Politics
Sat Jun 08 07:52:52 GMT 2013
Convergence
The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies
Call for Papers
Special issue on: New Media, Global Activism and Politics
Vol. 20, no. 3 (August 2014)
Guest editors: Carolyn Guertin (University of North Texas at Dallas) and
Angi Buettner (Victoria University of Wellington)
Deadline for refereed research articles: 30 August 2013
Indignados. Arab Spring. #Occupy. The 99%. Idle No More. #Upsettler.
GlobalNoise. Strike Debt. These are just some of the new terms to emerge
from the global mass protests of the last two years. They are part of a
sea change as political engagement, citizen journalism and tactical
media evolve as tools of protest and communication. These terms mark
only one small part of a much larger shift in media production and
distribution that is the rise of user-generated content or social media.
Within digital culture, the creative act has become a form of activism
carried out through the repurposing of pre-existing materials and media
for political change—and it is a practice that has swayed policy,
overturned governments and politicized subcultures and peoples on a
global scale.
In the 19th century, the crowd emerged as a new social force. It was a
force, it was argued, that shook the foundations of society and led
individuals to commit irrational acts. In the 21st century, we have seen
the power of crowds re-emerge as an ostensibly smarter and more nimble
cultural force empowered by mobile technologies, crowdsourcing
methodologies and networked systems. How has activism changed as a
result of new technologies? How are new media enlisted to assist in the
planning and enactment of socio-political change? How are governments
and political candidates using social media? How has social media
altered policies, elections and the democratic process?
Topics might include:
- Hacktivism
- Wikileaks
- Arab Spring
- #occupy
- Indignados
- Idle No More
- #upsettlers
- Global Noise
- Crowdsourcing
- Lobbying
- Flashmobs, smart mobs or network armies
- Riot simulation or protest modeling
- Microblogging as a form of protest
- Protest apps, including geolocative ones
- Eco-activism
- Activism in education
- Gaming and new media activism
- New media and the environment
- Politics and new media
- Activist or protest art
- Appropriation, subvertising, culture jamming or memes
- Slacktivism
- Clicktivism
- Cyberfeminism
- DIY culture
- Global protest networks
- Participatory culture
- eDemocracy
- Government sponsored social media
- Public media initiatives
- Elections and social media
Queries may be directed to the guest editors, Carolyn Guertin at
(carolyn.guertin /at/ gmail.com) or Angi Buettner at (Angi.Buettner /at/ vuw.ac.nz).
Convergence is published by Sage and all contributors must consult the
guide to manuscript submission at:
http://www.uk.sagepub.com/journalsProdDesc.nav?prodId=Journal201774#tabview=manuscriptSubmission
for details of house style.
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