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[ecrea] ICA Preconference "Audiences?"
Sun Nov 27 22:31:22 GMT 2016
Audiences? The familiar unknown of communication historiography
Deadline for Abstracts: 30.11.16
ICA Preconference San Diego, USA, May 25, 2017
Sponsor: ICA Communication History Division
Co-Sponsors:
ECREA Communication History Section, IAMCR History Section, DGPuK
Communication History Section
Organizers: Christian Schwarzenegger, Thomas Birkner, Kevin Grieves and
Samantha Oliver
Keynote Speakers: Sabina Mihelj and Sonia Livingstone
Media consumers have largely remained in the shadows of communication
history research. Methodological hurdles abound, and the relevance of
this type of research to the broader field of communication scholarship
has not always been clearly articulated. These challenges present an
opportunity to advance the conversation on audiences, and to chart new
directions for communication research. This ICA preconference is
dedicated to bringing together scholars from across the spectrum of
communication research and from around the globe to illuminate the
history of audiences, media practices and media use. Submissions are
invited to consider the full breadth of intellectual engagement with
audiences, media users and media practices in the past. This scope
includes examination of the historical interaction between audiences and
various media technologies. It also includes the historical engagement
of audiences with various types of journalistic sources and content as
well as the connections of different audiences with one other in various
social and public contexts of the past. Submissions that address
audience history from transnational and/or de-Westernized perspectives
are especially encouraged. We welcome papers on a wide array of
historically grounded themes that shed light on the current state of
historical research on audiences and media practices as well as
potential directions for future research:
(1) Audiences as they were then and are remembered now
Case studies on past media and communication practices from a variety of
perspectives are invited to shed light on current knowledge about past
audiences. These can range from exceptional audiences in extraordinary
circumstances (e.g. clandestine practices of media use in totalitarian
regimes or during war times) as well as mundane and everyday practices
of media users in the past. Nostalgic memory reveals how we imagine past
media audiences, and to what extent those audiences appear different
from today. The inter- and transgenerational exchange of media memories
and the designated role of media technologies in family life can also
help us understand past patterns and logics of media use.
We also welcome studies that emphasize the changing role of audiences in
different situations: Audience as civic public and its role in public
debate, audiences of journalism in contrast with audiences of
entertainment as well as the history of media use between collective and
individual practices in private or in public (e.g. while on the move in
public transport or in the family home). This includes not only mass
media but also the history of means of communication and technological
devices (e.g. the temporal liberation of audience experiences by the
video recorder).
(2) Historical ideas of the audience in popular and public debate
Historical understandings of media audiences are not only shaped by
academic knowledge but also by public debate and representations in
popular culture. Examining the regulation of and protection of audience
members’ media activities helps in the understanding of past conceptions
of audiences as well as implicit ideas of media effects. The perceived
impact of technological developments on audiences by politicians,
regulators and social pressure groups is also an area of interest for
the preconference. This includes critical and journalistic notions of
media audiences and associated fears (such as the notorious campaigns of
newspaper editors against the perils of radio or television). How media
users are depicted in a wide variety of popular culture formats makes
ideas of audiences visible, especially in regard to stereotypes. How do
depictions and characterizations of readers, listeners or viewers vary
depending on the media they use? We are interested in popular and public
ideas of the audience and their interplay with academic concepts and
their influence on research (e.g. in terms of funding).
(3) Histories of audience research: Schools of thought, theoretical
implications and change over time
We are interested in past developments within audience research and
their intellectual implications as well as their legacy for audience
research today. Papers are invited that probe or reconstruct shifting
understandings of the nature of audiences in relation to different
schools of thought. What epistemological shifts are to be observed in
how audiences were implicitly and explicitly addressed in different
areas, subfields and traditions of the field? For example, papers could
ask if the audience in social science- oriented effects research is the
same as in television studies, which were strongly influenced by British
media studies and cultural studies. Differences between the role of
audiences in transmission or ritual models of communication or the
differentiation of audiences and civic publics and their implications
for research are just a few further examples.
The field is characterized by changing ideas of audiences as rather
passive, homogeneous and highly influenced by strong media effects as
well as highly selective and active, participating, heterogeneous
audiences and minimal-effect media. Temporal aspects of media use have
also fluctuated over time. New media technologies have impacted the
practices and roles of media users throughout history; how can
conceptions of audiences be adapted accordingly? Are conceptions of
audiences fit for research on media practices in new media environments?
(4) Methods and sources for researching historical audiences
Most of the methodological approaches of contemporary audience or
reception research are not applicable for historical audiences or can
grasp past media practices only in limited ways. Historical audience
data may lack texture about the specific quality and meaning of media
engagement. Historical audience researchers thus often have to resort to
indirect methods and to reconstruct from obscure, scarce and incomplete
source material. Papers are invited that make use of diverse original
sources for historical audience research and discuss their value and
potential pitfalls. How might the shift toward big data and digitization
enhance our understanding of audiences of the past? Is the digital media
user more accessible for historical reconstruction?
Methodologies specifically designed to reconstruct media practices of
the past are also relevant. Oral history can be considered an invaluable
method for historical audience research, with the caveat that this
method is reconstructing shaped ideas and understandings of the meaning
of media uses from the contemporary. Although often idealizing memories
or highlighting the extraordinary while neglecting the mundane, the
approach to personal media memories can help us to understand the
discursive formation of media audiences. Submissions are invited that
employ oral history or that reflect innovative uses of other historical
methodologies to understand past media practices.
The composition and the practices, roles and possible actions of
audiences change over time and in different cultural or geographical
spaces. Media-centric perspectives on past media practices may neglect
the contextual dimensions of communicative practices. Thus papers are
also invited that help to reconstruct past media practices as embedded
in everyday life and the daily routines of audience members in various
cultures and geographies.
Abstracts of 300 words (maximum) should be submitted no later than 30
November 2016. Proposals for full panels are also welcome: these should
include a 250-word abstract for each individual presentation, and a
200-word rationale for the panel. Send abstracts to:
(christian.schwarzenegger /at/ phil.uni-augsburg.de)
<mailto:(christian.schwarzenegger /at/ phil.uni-augsburg.de)>
Authors will be informed regarding acceptance/rejection for the
preconference no later than 11 January 2017. Full papers will need to be
submitted no later than 1 May 2017 as these will be posted online and
made available to all those participating in the preconference. Early
career scholars and graduate students are highly encouraged to submit
their work. Please indicate if the research submitted is part of your
thesis or dissertation project. The organizers will aim to arrange for
discussants to provide an intensive response for graduate students projects.
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