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[ecrea] Call for Papers: Responsibility and Resistance - Ethics in Mediatized Worlds
Wed Mar 18 23:19:29 GMT 2015
Responsibility and Resistance: Ethics in Mediatized Worlds
International conference at the Austrian Academy of Sciences, Vienna
December 10-11, 2015
Organized by Prof. Dr. Dr. Matthias Karmasin (Austrian Academy of
Sciences/Alpen Adria University Klagenfurt), Prof. Dr. Friedrich Krotz
(University of Bremen) & Prof. Dr. Dr. Matthias Rath (University of
Education Ludwigsburg)
In communication studies, mediatization is one of the most frequently
used and discussed concepts to understand, to empirically study and
theoretically reconstruct the social and cultural changes of today, in
as far as they are a consequence of changes in media and communication.
Terminologically, “mediatization” describes a process in which,
“by means of the coming into existence and the establishment of new
media used by the people for specific purposes and the simultaneous
transformations of the old media and the ways how they became used,
human communication and therefore also the communicatively constructed
realities, in other words culture and society, identity and everyday
life, are changing” (Krotz 2005, 18).
However, this process does not simply serve to describe the upcoming of
a specific historical “media society”. Instead, mediatization is
constructed as a “meta-process”, i.e. a development that is broad in
scope, covers a long time span of human development and is relevant in
this or that way for most cultures and societies. From this perspective,
mediatization serves as an integrating concept like globalization or
individualization. Mediatization as a meta-process thus allows to
reconstruct the transformation of communication forms and media
practices as “longue durée” (Braudel), which comprises
“a variety of comprehensive developments, sometimes already lasting for
centuries, that commenced even before the invention of writing and that
are still not completed yet with the invention of the present-day media”
(Krotz 2007, 12).
Thus, mediatization research also has an orientation function for
empirical research and theory building. This is the case since it helps
to create relations between the growing number of empirical studies
which analyze the emergence and use of media in concrete social and
cultural contexts (“moyenne durée”) and to put them into order. It thus
helps to grasp them theoretically and may motivate further empirical
studies. In this way, after its first systematic description in 2001 and
followed up by various case studies, mediatization theory has become the
basic concept of manifold socio-scientific analyses on the micro and
meso as well as on the macro level, for example in the context of the
DFG Priority Program “Mediatized Worlds”, and can now be considered as
empirically helpful and theoretically fruitful.
Besides their descriptive function, “longue durée” reconstructions or
meta-processes also imply the potential of a normative and value-driven
analysis of media change, which is not media-centric, but asks for the
specific changes in the lives of citizens and their social relations,
institutions and organizations, as well as economy, education and other
relevant areas of human life, e.g. with respect to democracy, justice
and self-realization of the people.
Therefore, mediatization is not only a functional social process. It is
a concept on a superordinate level which as well
- describes the appropriation of media by human beings, and at the same
time
- understands this process of appropriation as a process of shaping
human communication.
Thus, the analysis of mediatization also raises questions of practical
orientation for action (micro-social aspect), of institutionally
designed options and limitations for action (meso-social aspect), and of
social as well as supranational context factors (macro-social aspect) of
media and communication practice.
In relation to this point of view, mediatization theory also moves into
the focus of a normative approach to media and communication research,
which is typical for contemporary media ethics (see Karmasin, Rath &
Thomaß 2013). Moreover, the consequentialistic perspective of media
ethics as applied ethics points towards a prospective impact assessment
of technical developments in media for the future of communicative
action, in particular to develop civil societies.
Among the many normative topics, two aspects seem to be particularly
relevant:
1. The term responsibility, which is constitutive for modern ethics. It
needs to be understood as a normative multi-relational claim to the
individual for its actions and the resulting consequences as well as the
active assumption of responsibility by the moral subject in the face of
a globalized media world, in which supranational bodies and legislators
cannot secure this assignment institutionally.
2. The term resistance, which is constitutive for modern social
philosophy and critical social science. It can be understood as an act
of refusal or active opposition towards individual, institutional or
structural phenomena of suppression and manipulation. In this sense,
resistance is reasoned with reference to an understanding of individual
sovereignty.
Both aspects relate to the context of concrete life worlds that are the
result – not only today, but generally – of a specific historical
mediatization of human communication.
The international experts conference “Responsibility and Resistance:
Ethics in Mediatized Worlds” is supposed to bring together researchers
that systematically illuminate mediatization in the above-mentioned
sense from a normative perspective. Possible questions of this symposium
are:
- What are the most problematic forms of mediatized communicative
actions, communication technologies and communication structures from a
moral point of view?
- How can we discuss responsibility for and resistance against these
forms of mediatization?
- Which normative principles can be made plausible?
Participants are expected to prepare 30-minute presentations in which
they theoretically explain and/or exemplify responsibility and
resistance in the process of mediatization.
More concrete topics could be:
- the role of different social groups of people for the use and the
development of media, which today is mainly determined by technological
invention and economic interests;
- the role of academic research about media change and mediatization
(for example, knowledge for whom?);
- the creation of new discourses in order to develop social norms on an
ethical basis, following and also controlling media transformations;
- the importance of media and media change for the socialization of
children and young people, e.g. by stressing the questions of digital
divide, media-related education and also media misuse;
- the role of media and mediatization for the development of a “habitus”
(Bourdieu) referring to the social class positions of the individual;
- the role of media and media development to support existing structures
of power, to create new ones or to make power relations more transparent
and support new forms of democratic participation;
- the question of who are the winning and who are the losing social
groups of people in culture and society;
- the role of companies, political, social institutions and technical
systems as „actors“ and „moral subjects“ in mediatized worlds;
- the role of social media and other media-related forms of
communication to be used for subversive practices and grassroots
movements of mediatized political participation;
- the necessary social and ethical rules for the government and its
bureaucracy, economic enterprises, but also ordinary citizens about how
to use the new potentials of an evolving media system;
- the changing conditions of privacy and the use of data to control and
manipulate against the idea of serving the people with that;
- the support for the civil society to gain the control over media and
media development;
- the role of mediatization for the change of everyday practices and
their basic conditions;
- the boundaries of media sovereignty in the light of an Internet of Things.
Submission and selection of papers
Conference languages will be English and German. Submissions for the
conference, however, should be made in English only, in order to
facilitate the international review process. Please send your proposal
to the organizers ((cmc /at/ oeaw.ac.at)) no later than June 1, 2015 (using a
pdf or a doc file). The abstract must not be longer than 8000 characters
(including blank spaces). Please add a title page to the abstract
containing the name(s) and address(es) of the presenter(s) and the title
of the presentation. All submissions will be subjected to anonymous
review based on the criteria of originality, relevance, theoretical
foundation, appropriateness of the methods used, clarity of language,
and reference to the conference theme. Submitters will be informed by
July 1, 2015, about the outcome of the selection process.
Local organization
Prof. Dr. Dr. Matthias Karmasin & Dr. Tobias Eberwein
Institute for Comparative Media and Communication Studies
Austrian Academy of Sciences | Alpen-Adria-Universität Klagenfurt
Postgasse 7/4/1 | A-1010 Vienna
(cmc /at/ oeaw.ac.at) | Tel. +43-1-51581-3110 | Fax +43-1-51581-3120
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