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[ecrea] call for book chapters - Reporting from the Wars 1850 – 2015
Sat Sep 19 21:42:26 GMT 2015
Call for Book Chapters
Reporting from the Wars 1850 – 2015
Editors: Barry Turner, Geoff Adams and Sanem Şahin
The book will be a compilation of historical and contemporary stories
of the war correspondent and battlefield photographer from the earliest
days of modern war reporting to the present. It will seek to determine
the changes in style, method and practice of the work of the war
correspondent and examine the changes in attitudes to, and how the
public view war from the high point of imperialism to the present day
jihad.
By mixing historical analysis with contributions from modern war
reporters it will analyse such subjects as the role of propaganda in
winning over the public to support wars of aggression, the portrayal of
war as entertainment, the use of technology in war reporting and the
lives, and sadly often the deaths of those who take on this most
dangerous and disturbing vocation. It is proposed to assemble 15
chapters written by war correspondents and academics to produce an
edited volume suitable for academic study and public interest
simultaneously.
The target audience therefore will not simply be for the academic or
specialist reader but will hopefully appeal to all with an interest in
the subject of war reporting and history. The book will explore how
emerging technologies, publicity and propaganda, the perceptions of
morality and the various relationships between the press, military and
governments have evolved since the Crimean War to the present day – and
how this has affected war and conflict reporting.
We propose three sections to this edited book, which will cover the
following topics:
The origin of the war correspondent
Starting with the Crimean War, the first major war covered by
photographers this can look at how modern technology made war reporting
a ‘news’ item in real time. Before the introduction of this technology
ware reporting was more closely related to story telling weeks after the
event sometimes supported by artists stylized impressions of the
fighting. This chapter can look at the difference to war reporting this
technology made on both the reporters themselves and the perceptions of
their audience. Consideration under this theme would be given to the
effect of visual technology from the earliest portable cameras to the
visual imagery of the digital age.
War reporting as a means to victory
For a nation to fight a war it has to be popular. Even dictatorships
and authoritarian regimes need public support in order to prosecute a
war to success. History is littered with unpopular wars unsupported by
the population with almost inevitable defeat at the hand of the enemy or
the people at home. This chapter can look at the methods used from the
early days of war reporting to the present to examine how publicity and
propaganda can convince the public that the war is a ‘just war’.
War reporting and the morality of war
These chapters will look at the way that the morality of war is
expressed in press reporting from the crudest propaganda to the subtlest
manipulation and spin. The relationship of reporters to the military
and government would be examined as would the concepts of a righteous or
war and the ‘war on terror. Themes would include the portrayal of
coalitions of the willing and the reporting of Jihad.
Please send 250 word abstracts to Sanem Şahin ((ssahin /at/ lincoln.ac.uk)) no
later than 30 November 2015.
Dr. Sanem Sahin | Lecturer
College of Arts
University of Lincoln. Brayford Pool, Lincoln, Lincolnshire. LN6 7TS
tel: +44 (0)1522 886132
staff profile | lincoln.ac.uk | facebook.com | twitter.com
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