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[ecrea] ICA pre-con: Global Perspectives on Populism and the Media
Tue Nov 07 08:10:11 GMT 2017
*CALL FOR PAPERS*
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*
*_Global Perspectives on Populism and the Media_*
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ICA Pre-Conference at Central European University, Budapest
May 22-23, 2018
The study of populism has never been more important than today in light
of recent social, political and economic tumult, and developments in
transnational media cultures. Across the world there have been numerous
populist backlashes against elected governments and their policies. The
emergent concerns of citizens about, for example, immigration and
economic austerity have been exploited by a range of political
opportunists, many with access to media resources. A proliferation of
digital and social media is in some countries providing new cultural
spaces for these actors to disseminate their messages and gain
mainstream media attention. In addition, established political
communicators are not immune to the populist impulse. Some mainstream
political parties and politicians, for example, have adopted populist
rhetoric in order to ensure electoral support, and some mainstream media
organizations, facing increasing commercial competition, have pandered
to populist political agendas. While populist politics is a
well-documented feature of modern political culture, and sometimes meets
not only with critique but with praise for challenging ossified
practices and values of pragmatic democratic politics, the communicative
aspects of populism have been underexplored or ignored. Moreover,
populist movements are often analyzed with a particular focus on
European and American right-wing movements. But populist movements and
upheavals have appeared from the Philippines to India to Turkey to
Russia. At the same time, variations of populism have arisen on both the
right and the left (and in-between) and have surfaced in a variety of
political systems and traditions.
This pre-conference aims to introduce global perspectives on the study
of media, communication and populism, welcoming conceptually innovative
submissions that examine populist communication and culture from all
around the world. Recognizing the location of the pre-conference, the
Hungarian capital of Budapest, the conference will also dedicate an
open-to-the public panel to the rise of populism in East-Central Europe.
The venue of the conference, Central European University, is rich in
symbolism, as this university has recently been attacked by the populist
government of Hungary. This symbolism will hopefully add to the
liveliness of the discussions, which we expect to be relevant to
academics in a diverse set of disciplines and fields (communication
studies, sociology, political science, cultural studies, history, among
others) and to non-academics as well.
The pre-conference also aims to be inclusive in perspectives and
methodologies. As John B. Judis, author of /The Populist Explosion/,
recently argued, political scientists often make the mistake of focusing
on a restrictive definition of populism. In contrast, our aim is to
analyze populism’s manifestations and connections to media and
communication in the broadest possible sense.
Relevant communicative processes of populism may include studies of
populist symbols, music, time and memory, political advertising
campaigns, social media groups, protest cultures, the narration of
political myths, mass media attitudes, the relation of populism to media
ownership patterns, among others. We particularly welcome unorthodox
approaches, ambitious social theories, and debunking of popular myths in
relations to populism and communication.
**
*Confirmed Keynote Speakers*
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Professor Michael Ignatieff, President and Rector, Central European
University
Professor Srirupa Roy, University of Göttingen
Professor Michael Schudson, Graduate School of Journalism, Columbia
University
*Submission Process*
*We invite scholars to**submit abstracts (maximum 500 words) of
theoretical and empirical research papers.***
*
*
The submissions should be emailed to the pre-conference organizers at
(GMSNConference /at/ lboro.ac.uk) <mailto:(GMSNConference /at/ lboro.ac.uk)>no later
than 15^th December 2017.
Authors will be informed of acceptance/rejection decisions no later than
30^th January 2018.
Accepted abstracts will be posted to the pre-conference website in
advance of the event.
Please direct questions on submissions or any aspect of the
pre-conference to (GMSNConference /at/ lboro.ac.uk)
<mailto:(GMSNConference /at/ lboro.ac.uk)>
*Registration*
All speakers and attendees must register and pay the pre-conference fee.
Participation fee (including coffee breaks and lunch buffet) is €50 for
presenters and non-presenters. Information on local hotels in Budapest
and travel information will be available at
http://www.gmsnetwork.netshortly.
To register for this pre-conference, participants need to go to
www.icahdq.org <http://www.icahdq.org/> and register online as part of
their main ICA conference registration, or as a stand-alone registration.**
*Organizers: *Julia Sonnevend (The New School for Social Research, USA),
Emily Keightley, James Stanyer, Vaclav Stetka (Loughborough University,
UK), Aswin Punathambekar (University of Michigan, USA), Marius Dragomir,
Eva Bognar (Central European University, Hungary). The pre-conference is
co-sponsored by the Political Communication, Journalism Studies and
Philosophy, Theory & Critique divisions of the International
Communication Association and by /Media, Culture & Society/.
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