Archive for 2016

[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]

[ecrea] CFP: PhD/ECR conference, Saturday, July 2nd 2016, De Montfort University, Leicester, UK

Wed May 11 22:41:23 GMT 2016



The Media Discourse Group, Leicester Media School, De Montfort University, is pleased to announce a CFP for our (free of charge) PhD/ECRconference ... (keynotes, Professor Andy Bennett, Professor of Cultural Sociology at Griffith University in Queensland,Australia and David Hayward, Coventry University and Hayward Black Media)

(Deadline for Receipt of Abstracts is 30th May 2016
reply to (mediadiscoursegroup /at/ hotmail.com) and cc (sprice /at/ dmu.ac.uk)
- abstracts already received will not need to re-submitted)

/Please disseminate to your doctoral candidates and early career researchers .../

'Researching Social Media Use: Identity, Community and Political Dissent'

Date: Saturday, July 2nd 2016
Venue: De Montfort University, Leicester, UK

Keynotes: Andy Bennett, Professor of Cultural Sociology at Griffith University in Queensland, Australia, /and/ David Hayward, founder of Hayward Black Media, Lecturer at Coventry University, UK, and journalist, writer, and media consultant

Andy Bennett, Professor of Cultural Sociology at Griffith University in Queensland, Australia 'Youth culture and the internet: a subcultural or post-subcultural phenomena?' Twenty years after the so-called digital revolution, debate regarding the impact of social media on young people and their collective cultural practices continues to be a significant aspect of the youth research. Topics explored range from the ways in which social media have reframed communication among young people, to questions about youth identity and the extent to which this has been reshaped by social media. Underpinning this is the larger question of how social media have altered the nature of youth culture itself. If youth researchers have long courted critical debates concerning how to frame the concept of youth culture as both theoretical and methodological fields of enquiry, the internet and related social media forms have brought new questions to bear on this debate. Thus, for some youth researchers, the internet serves to accentuate some of the pivotal qualities that have traditionally enabled particular youth groups to set themselves apart from mainstream norms and values in a socio-cultural space that has often been referred to as ‘subcultural’. For others, the internet presents as the ultimate foil to such subcultural categorisations of youth. In this context, the internet is regarded as a medium for new forms of connection between young people in which associations of style and taste become more fluid and are diluted by other forms of lifestyle preference and aesthetic sensibility. The purpose of this paper will be to critically analyse these debates and to consider whether youth culture’s interaction with the internet is best understood as a subcultural or post-subcultural phenomena.

David Hayward, founder of Hayward Black Media
'Online news video, social networks and the disruption of the media industry' Online and digital news video is revolutionising the journalism and media industry. More than 330 billion videos are watched every month on the big four social media platforms. On Facebook alone, more than 9 billion videos are viewed everyday. With such huge audiences, online social video has become the key battleground for an industry, struggling with failing and out of date cultures and business models. For the first time, start-ups and digital native news organisations are challenging the traditional press, media and publishing houses and broadcasters. We will explore the role video and social media networks are playing in disrupting the business of journalism and news, looking at what the future holds at a local, national and international level.


The submission of abstracts will be peer reviewed for this One-Day Conference and is open to PhD Candidates, Early Career Researchers, and Specialists working in the field.

Themes

The conference organising committee welcomes abstracts including – but not limited to - the following topics:

- identity, diversity, liminality,
- othering, representation, marginalisation
- refugees, asylum seekers, immigration
- riots, conflict, protest, state power
- citizenship, moral campaigns, community
- anti-systemic and progressive protest movements
- consent, surveillance, data mining
- on/offline in/visibility
- public/ private space,
- autonomous zones, urbanisation, gentrification, critical cartography
- space/spaces, place/places, borders, zones
- geographies, remediation, interactivities
- austerity, occupation, technology, debt
- trade unions, solidarity, class, race
- globalisation, neoliberalism, myth, post-capitalism, nationalism
- localisation, glocalisation, post-colonialism, diasporas, de/territorialisation
- gender, feminism, post-feminism, patriarchy, sexual politics, queer theory
- far right movements, left wing groups
- Marxism, post-Marxism, ideology, anarchism, activism
- political discourse, cultural events
- music, subcultures, tribes/neo-tribes
- subversive DiY practices
- social theory, methodology and media forms
- audiences, fandom, media theory
- performativity, spectacle, embodiment
- pedagogies, philosophies, popular culture
- memory, perception, subjectivities
- propaganda, memes, cartoons
- film, television, art, illustrations

Abstract Submission:

All proposal submissions should be a maximum of 250 words and include:
- Full Title of the Paper
- Full Name, Contact Details and Institutional Affiliation
- A Short Bio (max 100 words)
- Any Requirements (projector, CD/DVD player, etc.)
Presentations will be no more than 20 minutes long. It is recommended that all video clips should be embedded into a PowerPoint as MP4's prior to the day and that you also bring a USB with the clips and presentation.

*Deadline for Receipt of Abstracts is 30th May 2016.*
(reply to (mediadiscoursegroup /at/ hotmail.com) and cc (sprice /at/ dmu.ac.uk))

Proposals should be sent as an email attachment with a short bio (max 100 words) to: Media Discourse Group Conference [mailto:(mediadiscoursegroup /at/ hotmail.com) <mailto:(mediadiscoursegroup /at/ hotmail.com)>]

*You will be notified of acceptance to this one-day conference by 3rd June 2016.*

Stuart Price, on behalf of the PGR Media Discourse Committee

Stuart Price
Professor of Media and Political Discourse

---------------
ECREA-Mailing list
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier and ECREA.
--
To subscribe, post or unsubscribe, please visit
http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
URL: http://homepages.vub.ac.be/~ncarpent/
--
ECREA - European Communication Research and Education Association
Chaussée de Waterloo 1151, 1180 Uccle, Belgium
Email: (info /at/ ecrea.eu)
URL: http://www.ecrea.eu
---------------


[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]