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[ecrea] > MedieKultur - call for papers: Bourdieu and The Media – New and old Media practices from a field perspective
Tue Jan 28 18:55:17 GMT 2014
> MedieKultur - call for papers: Bourdieu and The Media – New and old
Media practices from a field perspective
>
Submission deadline: August 15, 2014
Publication deadline: Spring 2015
Editors: Ida Willig (guest), Karen Waltorp (guest), Jannie Møller Hartley
Bourdieu’s field theory has proven useful in a variety of research
areas, and constitutes a promising theoretical frame for analysis of the
media. However there is a lack of empirical research exploring the
usefulness of field theory specifically in relation to new media, but
also relative to media practices in general, where it might constitute a
relevant alternative to other sociological perspectives.
In his comprehensive work, Pierre Bourdieu only briefly touched on the
importance of media for social practice, namely in his bookPhotography
as a Middle Brow Art (1900), and the polemic and much criticized book On
Television (1995), which is the closest attempt to analyzing the
influence of a specific media platform. Although its sweeping
conclusions, On Television build on Bourdieu’s many other studies, it
has been necessary for scholars exploring media practices to develop
field theory into a more comprehensive and nuanced media theory that
allows for the analysis of media reception, media content and media
production, as is the case, for example, in the development of the
concept of a media meta-capital (Couldry, 2003), or in studies analyzing
the journalistic field (see Benson & Neveu, 2005; Schultz, 2006; Wiik,
2010). However, few studies have explored the usefulness of field theory
within a new media context, as done, for example, by Baym (2000) when
she examines the social organization of, and struggles over, meaning
within an online cultural system via ethnographic studies of online
communities. Thus there is a need to develop the field theory framework
further to enhance our empirical understanding of new media and new
media practices. It is likely though that Bourdieu would not consider
new media as a decisive break with the hitherto known forms of
communication, as he sees the institutionalization of fields in line
with what new-institutionalism denotes as "path-dependency", which is
the fact that previous historical battles, to some extent, have a
limiting effect on the future. Despite this, field theory, according to
Benson and Neveu, provides a good starting point to investigate what
they call "the complex relationship between new and old media" (2005, p.
8). In this issue we ask how field theory can provide analytic tools for
understanding media and media practices and in which ways field theory
has been - or could potentially be - developed in accordance with the
new media realities.
Topics of interest include (but are not limited to):
a. Applied/empirical studies using Bourdieu and Field Theory in regard
to the production of, the content on, or the usage of: different media
platforms (old media vs. new), mass media (e.g., newspapers, TV, radio,
internet etc.), interaction media (e.g., mobile phones, Messenger,
e-mail, Web 2.0 etc.) or social media (e.g., YouTube, Wikipedia,
Facebook, Twitter etc.).
b. Methodological contributions discussing field theory in relation to
both new and old media practices.
c. Discussions of field theory and Bourdieu’s concepts/theory of media
in comparison with other media theories.
d. Studies of the use of media or media reception analysis in for
example journalism, education, organizations, art, political activism etc.
e. Studies of the media and media practices or the development of
specific media “fields” from a historical perspective.
> MedieKultur publishes theme issues with the aim of bringing nordic
and international media and communication research into dialogue.
MedieKultur is a double-blind peer reviewed international journal
published by SMID (Association of media researchers in
Denmark).Accordingly, MedieKultur is a publication forum for both Danish
and international researchers, and papers as well as reviews of relevant
contributions (books, blogs, websites and the like) can be submitted
written in English, Danish, Swedish and Norwegian. The journal addresses
students, educators and researchers at relevant educational and research
institutions as well as individuals working in the media business.
>
> You can find more info at :
http://ojs.statsbiblioteket.dk/index.php/mediekultur/index
>
> With this issue of Bourdieu and the Media we encourage international
researchers to contribute to the journal so that the scope of discussion
of the relevance of field theory in media and communication research
will be as broad as possible.
>
> Regards from the editors, Ida Willig, Jannie Møller Hartley and Karen
Waltorp.
Jannie Møller Hartley | Adjunkt, Ph.d. Journalist | Journalistik | CBIT
| Roskilde Universitet
Webredaktør Foreningen for Undersøgende Journalistik: Fuj.dk
Redaktionsmedlem MedieKultur.dk
(jath /at/ ruc.dk)
Assistant Professor | Journalism | CBIT | Roskilde University
Building 40.3 | Box 260 | 4000 Roskilde | Denmark
Phone: (+45) 4674 37 53
Email: (jath /at/ ruc.dk)
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