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[ecrea] Panel on political humor as social action -- International Pragmatics Conference, Belfast
Mon May 30 10:21:36 GMT 2016
We are planning to submit a panel on “political humor as social action”
to the 15th International Pragmatics Conference, Belfast, Ireland, 16-21
July 2017. Should you be interested in participating, please get in
touch (<mailto:(politicalhumorpanel /at/ gmail.com)>(politicalhumorpanel /at/ gmail.com))
Should the panel be accepted, abstracts would be due 15 Oct. 2016.
Best,
Tom Van Hout
Political humor as social action: verbal-visual attitudes towards
politicians in late modernity
Convenors:
Tom Van Hout (University of Antwerp)
Peter Burger (Leiden University)
Otto Santa Ana (University of California Los Angeles)
At the intersection of discourse and media studies lies media
linguistics (from German Medienlinguistik), an umbrella term for the
study of mediated language in society. Two approaches can be discerned
within media linguistics. Work on language ofthe media examines how
(news) media use language to represent social life. Work on language
inthe media investigates how language standards, ideologies, and change
are represented in the media. The popularity of media linguistics is
spurred on by two developments: the shifting ecology of media
organizations and their fragmented audiences, and the proliferation of
mediated communication in society, or mediatization (Van Hout & Burger
2016).
This panel invites researchers to address the relationship between
political humor and media(ted) language. In keeping with the conference
theme of ‘Pragmatics in the real world’, this panel examines the
distinctive nature of the pragmatics of humor as this involves
*
news events such as sound bites (Lee 2012), bloopers (Silverstein
2011), or talk scandals (Ekström & Johansson 2008)
*
media genres such as cartoons (Swain 2012), fake news (Waisanen
2011), late-night comedic monologues (Santa Ana 2009) or internet
memes (Milner 2013)
*
types of humor such as irony (Sanina 2014), and political satire
(Reilly 2012)
This panel welcomes empirically grounded contributions that show what
social action is accomplished when political discourse and media
discourse are juxtaposed. We expect relevant contributions to explore
political humor from a variety of analytical approaches such as
discourse analysis, rhetorics, multimodality, and linguistic
ethnography. We welcome other participants to join this panel with their
contributions and look forward to pooling our interests and insights
with the aim to publish the papers presented during the panel.
Abstracts should be sent to
<mailto:(politicalhumorpanel /at/ gmail.com)>(politicalhumorpanel /at/ gmail.com).
Proposals should contain: title of proposed paper, author name and
affiliation, contact details and an abstract in the 250-300 word range.
The deadline for receipt of abstracts is 15 October 2016.
References
Ekström, M., & Johansson, B. (2008). Talk scandals. Media, Culture &
Society, 30(1), 61-79.
Lee, F.L.F. (2012). The Life Cycle of Iconic Sound Bites: politicians’
transgressive utterances in media discourses. Media, Culture, & Society
34(3), 343-358.
Milner, R. M. (2013). Pop Polyvocality: Internet Memes, Public
Participation, and the Occupy Wall Street Movement. International
Journal of Communication, 7, 2357-2390.
Reilly, I. (2012). Satirical Fake News and/as American Political
Discourse. The Journal of American Culture, 35(3), 258-275.
Sanina, A. G. (2014). Visual political irony in Russian new media.
Discourse, Context & Media, 6, 11-21.
Santa Ana, O. (2009) Did you call in Mexican? The racial politics of Jay
Leno immigrant jokes. Language in Society, 38(1), 23–45.
Silverstein, M. (2011a). Presidential Ethno-blooperology: Performance
Misfires in the Business of "Message"-ing. Anthropological Quarterly,
84(1), 165-186.
Van Hout, T., & Burger, P. (2016). Mediatization and the language of
journalism. In O. García, N. Flores & M. Spotti (Eds.), Oxford Handbook
of Language and Society. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Waisanen, D. J. (2011). Crafting Hyperreal Spaces for Comic Insights:
The Onion News Network's Ironic Iconicity. Communication Quarterly,
59(5), 508-528.
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