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[Commlist] "Narrating Cold Wars" – Call for Proposals
Mon Apr 05 08:51:13 GMT 2021
*Conference will interrogate the legacy of Cold War narratives
*
Proposals: Due 1 July 2021 <https://narratingcoldwars.wixsite.com/hkbu>
Conference dates: 11–12 November 2021
In an age of intensifying rivalry between the United States and China,
an interdisciplinary conference at Hong Kong Baptist University
will look critically at “Cold War” narratives, both historically and as
a construct for understanding contemporary developments.
This year marks the 30th anniversary of the original Cold War, the
half-century of US-Soviet superpower rivalry that left few
societies untouched. The HKBU conference, to be held on 11–12 November
2021 (in Hong Kong, if possible), will interrogate dominant frames of
Cold War thinking, examining how these frames are constructed,
circulated, mobilised and contested through media and culture. The
organisers are currently inviting proposals
<https://narratingcoldwars.wixsite.com/hkbu>, which are due by 1 July.
The event is organised by HKBU’s new Global Communication and Power
cluster (GCAP), comprising scholars in media, communication and
film studies at the School of Communication, in partnership with
political scientists at the Department of Government and International
Studies (GIS).
“Time is more than ripe for a reappraisal of the Cold War and its
historical legacy,” said Ying Zhu of the Academy of Film.
“Particularly amidst the jostling for global influence of competing
ideologies between established and emerging superpowers, which confines
smaller nations and alliances in the global pecking order. We are
clearly nowhere near the end of history.”
The conference is the brainchild of Daya Thussu of the Department
of Journalism. “As we enter the third decade of the
twenty-first century, Cold War 2.0 has become arguably one of the most
contested and controversial geopolitical discourses,” he says. The
concept demands critical analysis, he adds: “Does its adoption as the
dominant narrative by the global media indicate insight or a failure of
imagination in a multipolar world?”
Thussu and Zhu are the editors of, respectively, Global Media
and Communication and Global Storytelling: Journal of Digital and Moving
Images and aim to invite conference presenters to contribute to special
themed sections in the two journals.
The conference theme aligns with what has been called the “narrative
turn” in political science, referring to how facts are constructed and
woven together to make sense of political realities, notes Alistair
Cole, head of GIS. “This is a timely opportunity to revisit past Cold
War narratives, and to map contemporary and competing efforts to use
discourse to address the challenges of cooperation and conflict in the
emerging world order,” he says.
Jean-Pierre Cabestan, also of GIS, points out that many international
relations experts are focused on the apparent emergence of a new Cold
War between the West and China, making it a timely occasion to revisit
the original Cold War. “This will help us to better comprehend the
intriguing similarities — geostrategic rivalry, technological and
ideological competition — and the profound differences — economic
globalisation and interdependence — between the past, the present… and
probably the future,” he says.
Kenneth Paul Tan, who joined GCAP this year under HKBU’s Talent 100
scheme and heads the conference programme committee, observes that in
some respects the Cold War never really ended. “Today, so much of how
we understand who we are and the world we live in, as well as the ways
that we represent and communicate these things, is made possible but
also constrained by Cold War categories, modes, and styles of thinking,”
he notes.
“We are therefore very excited in this conference to critique from
various disciplinary vantage points the limitations of Cold
War thinking, while acknowledging its continued ability to generate new
meaning, self-reflexivity, and creative expression.”
The conference reflects HKBU’s strong belief in cross-faculty
collaboration, says Cherian George, the School of
Communication’s associate dean for research and a GCAP cluster member.
“We expect the conference to generate conversations on topics of
transdisciplinary interest, such as state propaganda
and hypernationalism,” he says. “The diverse make-up of our organising
committee reflects our openness to investigate our chosen theme from
multiple perspectives. We look forward to receiving proposals
that surprise us with fresh ways to make sense of Cold War narratives.”
View the Call for Proposals
<https://narratingcoldwars.wixsite.com/hkbu> at
https://narratingcoldwars.wixsite.com/hkbu
<https://narratingcoldwars.wixsite.com/hkbu>
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