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[ecrea] Call for submissions: “Media of Crisis, Criticism, and Opposition: Tactical Media in the Struggle for Social Change”
Mon Oct 22 15:43:21 GMT 2018
Call for submissions: “Media of Crisis, Criticism, and Opposition:
Tactical Media in the Struggle for Social Change” in the special 2019
fall issue of /Democratic Communiqu//é/
Edited by Rhon Teruelle and Jesse Cohn
**
Deadline for submission of abstracts (500 words, add 200 words bio):
January 1, 2019
Notification of acceptance: February 15, 2019
Final deadline for submission of full article: May 31, 2019
All articles undergo a double-blind peer review process.
Tactical media has been explained as “media of crisis, criticism, and
opposition” (Lovink and Garcia, 1997), growing out of a long history of
advocates for social change employing their creativity to capture media
attention. From the use of mainstream television by the anti-war
movement in the Sixties to the Zapatistas’ innovative use of the
Internet in the mid-1990s, and the use of social media during the Arab
Spring in 2010 and 2011, the Quebec student strike of 2012, and the
Umbrella Revolution in Hong Kong in 2014, examples of the tactical use
of media in struggles for social change abound. Currently, many students
of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School who survived the Valentine’s Day
school shooting have used Twitter to organize, coordinate and challenge
the National Rifle Association (NRA) and American gun laws to great
effect. While on-the-ground activity was instrumental in all of these
actions, the positive impact that various media forms had on these
events cannot be discounted.
/
/
/Democratic Communiqu//é/ invites contributions to the Fall 2019 special
issue dedicated to “Tactical Media in the Struggle for Social Change.”
This issue focuses on the analysis and investigation of the tactical and
political use of media in the struggle for social change. We ask: How
does the tactical use of media in the struggle for social change
construct, shape and/or influence various movements? What effects do the
tactical use of media have on advocacy? Other possible topics of
interest include the following:
-Concepts of “tactical media” were first formulated before the advent of
social media. How do Twitter, Facebook, etc. complicate earlier theories
of “tactical media”?
- Tactical media have been described as “ephemeral,” “hold[ing] no
ground of their own,” “disappear[ing] once they are executed,” and
“represent[ing] no particular politics or vision of a desirable future”
(Ray and Sholette, 2008). Does this assessment stand today?
What are the possibilities and/or limitations of tactical media?
-What developments in theory and/or methodology might be especially
relevant or useful in understanding tactical media?
-How do the uses and effects of tactical media get inflected by race,
gender, disability, and other axes of identity?
While we are open to an examination of any media platform, ones focusing
on social media are particularly welcome. We invite comparative
transcultural perspectives.
Please address queries and submissions no later than January 1, 2019 to
(cfptacticalmediassc /at/ gmail.com)
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