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[Commlist] CfP: Dissolving Boundaries of Hybrid Journalism (Thematic Section - SComS)
Mon Jan 28 16:43:26 GMT 2019
/Studies in Communication Sciences (SComS)/
Call for Papers for the Thematic Section 1/2020
*"The Dissolving Boundaries of Hybrid Journalism: Rethinking News Work
Between Datafication, Hacking and Activism"*
Guest editors:
Dr. Colin Porlezza (City, University of London) & Dr. Philip Di Salvo
(Università della Svizzera italiana)
As journalism becomes increasingly networked and datafied – produced by
different actors with different backgrounds, intentions and norms – new
types of hybrid journalism arise. These hybrid forms of journalism often
transcend traditional conceptions as journalists increasingly engage in
activism or in collaborations with whistleblowers, hackers algorithms
and artificial intelligence or machine learning. While this trend
challenges the binary thinking of what journalism is and what it is not,
it also enables new forms of journalistic truth-telling (Baym, 2017).
This call wants to explore, discuss and shed light on the different
types and forms of hybrid journalism, what hybridity actually means and
what consequences it entails for news work.
Scholars like Carlson (2015, 2016), Lewis (2012, see also Carlson &
Lewis, 2015) have shown that the boundaries of journalism are more and
more contested as journalists are forced to renegotiate the space
between producers and users in a digital environment characterized by
high choice (Van Aelst et al., 2017) and a participatory culture
(Jenkins, 2013). The established news production with its specific set
of epistemological beliefs is thus confronted with new actors and
professional roles such as data journalists, hackers, cybersecurity
experts, activists or whistleblowing platforms that turn journalism into
a blurred term difficult to pin down. These circumstances entail
tensions over definitions of journalism as cultures, role conceptions,
epistemologies, norms and educational paths become increasingly
heterogeneous.
At the same time, however, the concept of hybridity is not immune to
criticisms: Witschge et al. (2018) rightly pointed out that not every
complex phenomenon that defies any immediate explanation is
automatically an emergence of hybridity. We should therefore better
understand what hybridity means in the first place, how its explanatory
power can be fruitfully connected to other existing theoretical
frameworks in journalism, and what developments are “truly” hybrid.
Hybrid journalism requires us to rethink the “limited binary dualities
that have long governed our theoretical and empirical work in the field”
(Witschge et al. 2018) and some of its most central notions such as
autonomy, collaboration, objectivity, the separation of news and
entertainment or fact and fiction. Therefore, this thematic section aims
at gathering cutting-edge research on journalism and hybridity, with a
specific emphasis on the role of data-driven journalism, cybersecurity,
hacking and activism. In addition we would like to explore collaborative
news production between journalists and actors outside the established
journalistic field, and how they shape the culture(s) of journalism. We
also encourage scholars to submit papers that cover non-Western
countries. We invite contributions not only from journalism studies, but
from all fields across media studies and communication sciences.
Possible topics include, but are not limited to:
* How datafication is shaping journalistic epistemologies
* The borderline between activism and journalism
* Journalists as hackers or the perils of collaborations with hackers
* The importance of cybersecurity for and its impact on journalism
* Hybridity in human-AI collaborations in newsmaking
* The consequences of dissolving boundaries and shifting norms for
journalistic authority
* Ethical challenges of hybrid journalism
* The amalgamation of pop culture and news reporting
* The consequences for newsmaking of different role conceptions of
actors participating in the networked news production
/Article format:/
The length of the articles in the thematic section should be between
6,000 and 8,000 words (including abstract and references). All submitted
papers must adhere to APA6 style (www.apastyle.org
<http://www.apastyle.org>).
/Submission guidelines:/
Abstracts of 500 words should be sent to (hybridjournalism2018 /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(hybridjournalism2018 /at/ gmail.com)> by _15th March, 2019_. The
abstracts should include the main idea/argument, research questions, a
short literature review and/or theoretical perspectives, information on
methodology and empirical findings (if relevant). The journal welcomes
submissions in English, German, French, or Italian, but the abstract has
to be written in English. Decision of acceptance will be given by 15th
April, 2019. Invited full paper will be due on 31st July, 2019. The
invitation to submit a full paper does not guarantee acceptance into the
special issue. Final acceptance depends on a double-blind peer review
process. The expected publication date of the thematic section is April
2020. The thematic section is expected to contain between 5 and 6 articles.
Please send the abstract, including your names, affiliations and contact
details, to:
(hybridjournalim2018 /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(hybridjournalim2018 /at/ gmail.com)>
/About SComS:/
SComS is an international journal of communication research that is
jointly edited by the Swiss Association of Communication and Media
Studies (SGKM) and the Faculty of Communication Sciences of the
Università della Svizzera italiana (USI Lugano). SComS aims to build
bridges between different research cultures, and publishes high-quality
original articles in English, German, French, and Italian. Its contents
encompass the broad range of communication-related disciplines, in
particular the analysis of public communication, based on social
scientific methods. As a general forum for communication scholarship,
the journal is especially interested in research that crosses
disciplinary boundaries.
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