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[ecrea] cfp: #BlackLivesMatter: Civil Rights and Social Justice in the 21st Century
Wed Feb 11 21:18:49 GMT 2015
CALL FOR PAPERS, PANELS, MEDIA/ARTS PROPOSALS
#BlackLivesMatter: Civil Rights and Social Justice in the 21st Century
Communication Graduate Student Conference
California State University East Bay, Hayward Campus
May 15 -16, 2015
Submit online until March 31
CommGSCon.blogspot.com <http://CommGSCon.blogspot.com>
The Graduate Program in Communication of California State University
East Bay in partnership with the CSUEB Communication Graduate Student
Society invite submissions of conference papers, panels and media/arts
pieces for the 2015 annual Communication Graduate Student Conference.
The conference will take place on the CSU East Bay Hayward campus on
Friday and Saturday, May 15 -16, 2015, bringing students and invited
faculty speakers from around the San Francisco Bay Area and beyond.
This year’s keynote speaker is renowned feminist hip hop scholar Aisha
Durham, PhD, from University of South Florida, author of Home with Hip
Hop Feminism (2014), “The Stage Hip-Hop Feminism Built” (2013), “Hip Hop
Feminist Media Studies” (2010), and editor of Home Girls, Make Some
Noise!: Hip Hop Feminism Anthology (2007).
This is a multi/interdisciplinary event. We invite submissions from
across the humanities, social sciences, arts, education, and all other
related fields. Paper, panel, and media/arts proposals may be submitted
online at commgscon.blogspot.com <http://commgscon.blogspot.com> until
March 31, 2015.
This year’s conference is organized around the theme #BlackLivesMatter:
Civil Rights and Social Justice in the 21st Century.
Possible topics and themes include (but are not limited to):
• The status and renewal of civil rights consciousness in America and
around the world
• The roles of social media and online activism in local and global
political movements
• The role of culture in contemporary social change
• Empowerment strategies in academia and local communities
• The discourse of #BlackLivesMatter and other current civil rights
signifiers
• Contemporary everyday experiences in communities of resistance
• The prison industrial complex
• Impacts of the “wars on” poverty, drugs, and terrorism on life in
targeted communities
• African American, Feminist and “minority” identities in digital
consumer culture
• Stratification and economic divides in contemporary America and around
the world
• Education and inequality (NCLB, digital divides, anti-intellectualism
in America, private vs public)
• Geographies of wealth and poverty both local and global (including
gentrification and displacement)
• Employment and ownership in the global economy
• Gender and sexual identities within and as communities of resistance
• Ability and Age in intersectional identities
• Contemporary media and ideologies of power
• The political economy of policing in America and America as “global
police”
• The post-Obama world and the discourse of post-racial America
While graduate student submissions are the focus, outstanding senior
undergraduate submissions are also encouraged. (Special undergraduate
sessions will be created to facilitate an inclusive and respectful
dialogue across disciplines and levels of scholarly achievement).
The broader East Bay community is invited and welcome to attend
individual sessions free of charge.
Community groups whose work directly relates to the conference theme are
invited to submit proposals for special sessions (including workshops),
and/or informational tables.
For more information about the conference visit CommGSCon.blogspot.com
<http://CommGSCon.blogspot.com>
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