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[Commlist] Call for Papers for a Special Issue of The International Journal of Press/Politics: “VisualPolitics”
Tue May 28 12:38:17 GMT 2019
Call for Papers for a Special Issue of The International Journal of
Press/Politics: “Visual Politics”
Guest editors: Erik Bucy ((erik.bucy /at/ ttu.edu)), Texas Tech University
Jungseock Joo ((jjoo /at/ comm.ucla.edu)), University of California at Los Angeles
Manuscript submission deadline: 15 December 2019
Images are both ubiquitous and consequential in contemporary politics.
The rise of images in politics parallels the rise of images in society
as icons of socio-political messaging, vessels of persuasive intent, and
efficient carriers of social information for citizens of increasingly
harried societies. From television coverage of campaigns and elections
to visual memes and images of leaders circulated on social media, visual
portrayals shape perceptions of the political world. When used
strategically, visual portrayals hold the capacity to frame issues,
candidates, and causes in a particular light and affect the acceptance
or rejection of social policies. As representations of public opinion
and leadership, political images influence issue understanding and
motivate citizens to action.
Political visuals are potent in part because they do not require
conventional literacy to apprehend and operate at both an individual and
cultural level. From an information processing perspective, political
images are highly efficient carriers of social and symbolic information
that is quickly assessed, rapidly judged, and readily remembered. In
news coverage, candidate portrayals and event depictions may crystallize
sentiment among the viewing public and alternately inspire increased
involvement or disenchantment with politics. Culturally, images can act
as icons of social solidarity or political isolation, serving to
mainstream or marginalize individuals, groups, and causes. The polysemic
quality of images opens them to diverse interpretation, depending on the
viewer’s orientation.
As forms of information, political images are not only open to
interpretation but are also susceptible to digital manipulation. Image
shading, facial blending, digital editing, and other alterations of
political materials can have persuasive effects on audiences, raising
troubling ethical concerns. More recently, the mass spread of
“deepfakes”, i.e., manipulated video recordings, threatens to undermine
the authenticity of recorded candidate communication and further confuse
unsuspecting viewers, already buffeted by fabricated visual memes and
text-based disinformation campaigns.
These and related considerations make the systematic study of political
visuals and their effects necessary and urgent. Despite renewed interest
in visual analysis within political communication, images remain an
understudied feature of the contemporary political media landscape. This
special issue of The International Journal of Press/Politics therefore
invites original research conducted in any methodological tradition that
fits the theme of “Visual Politics.” In this special issue, we hope to
highlight new possibilities for theory development, methodological
innovation, and cross-national approaches to advance the study of visual
political communication.
RESEARCH TOPICS
Possible topics include, but are not limited to, the following:
The influence of political images in digital campaigns, including
comparisons between online messaging, social media strategies, and more
traditional forms of political advertising
The role of visual messaging in disinformation efforts, whether
used to confuse, incite resentment, or demotivate potential voter or
citizen involvement
Computational analysis of large-scale visual datasets to detect
patterns of coverage or behavior not evident in smaller, hand-coded projects
Integrated or comparative analysis of multimodal cues in political
messages and their synergistic or differential impacts on viewer perceptions
Visual analysis of protest and collection action, including visual
framing of activism or demonstrations as well as visual memes circulated
on social media
Cross-national comparisons of visual news framing of politics or
protest and its reception by audiences
Viewer reception of newer visual technologies such as 360-degree
video cameras to depict campaign events, demonstrations, marches, or
other collective actions
Visual depictions of populist and fringe political actors,
including signature gestures and nonverbal displays, expressive range,
or performative repertoires
Effects of nonverbal aggression, norm violations, and other
transgressive candidate behavior on viewers of political programming
Visual measures of negative advertising, incivility, “in your
face”-style of candidate interaction, or other normatively fraught
political communication styles
Visual analysis of hate speech and white nationalism, including
identifiable signs and symbols as identified by the Anti-Defamation
League and other watchdogs
The role of viewer orientations (e.g., ideology, partisanship,
political interest, age cohort, moral outlook, geographical
situatedness, issue attitudes) in shaping political image
interpretations and message efficacy
The role of visual content in explaining patterns of news sharing
on social media
The use of visuals in emerging genres of political campaign
communication, whether mini-documentaries, mash-up advertising,
candidate-generated videos, or political selfies.
SUBMISSION INFORMATION
Manuscript submissions for this special issue are due on 15 December 2019.
Please submit your work through our online submission portal and ensure
that the first line of the cover letter states: “Manuscript to be
considered for the special issue on Visual Politics”. Manuscripts should
follow the IJPP submission guidelines. Submissions will be subject to a
double-blind peer review process and must not have been published,
accepted for publication, or under consideration for publication elsewhere.
Authors interested in submitting their work are encouraged to contact
the guest editors, Erik Bucy ((erik.bucy /at/ ttu.edu)) and Jungseock Joo
((jjoo /at/ comm.ucla.edu)) with questions.
EXPECTED TIMELINE
Paper submissions: 15 December 2019
First decision: 15 February 2020
Paper revisions: 15 April 2020
Final decision: 15 May 2020
Online publication: July 2020
Print publication: October 2020
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