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[Commlist] Call for papers: Histories of digital journalism
Thu Aug 05 19:11:19 GMT 2021
Call for Papers
HISTORIES OF DIGITAL JOURNALISM
A conference exploring the intersections of history, culture, digital
technology and journalism
Budapest, Hungary: 24–25 June 2022
*Keynote Speakers*
Mark Deuze (University of Amsterdam)
Laura Ahva (Tampere University)
Although the shared past of digitization and journalism stretches back
at least to a half-century, digital journalism history is a field still
in formation. Building on the momentum of the recent ‘historical turn’
in digital media and internet studies, the aim of the conference is to
bring together an interdisciplinary network of scholars to interrogate
digital journalism histories and to start a global critical exchange on
various approaches to and aspects of historicising digital journalism.
As digital journalism has been re-configured by socio-historical
contradictions of communication and complexities of its technological
innovations, journalism scholarship should continuously strive for
enhancing critical exchange to advance studies that intersect with
numerous disciplines, theoretical approaches and methodological
traditions. Emphasis of the conference is on the plurality of histories
instead of one single digital journalism history, acknowledging
diachronic as well as synchronic complexities of social relations,
political contingencies, cultural traditions and power configurations
between journalism and digitisation. Instead of enforcing one great
master narrative, the conference aims to offer a space to embrace the
co-existence of parallel, sometimes complementing, often conflicting
historical investigations and narratives.
By aiming to explore the intersections of history, culture, digital
technology and journalism, the conference welcomes papers and panels
that are grounded on diachronic or synchronic explorations of digital
journalism ‘pasts’, while elaborating the relevance of its historical
findings for digital journalism ‘futures’. The conference invites
theoretical and methodological reflections on historicising digital
journalism as well as original single case studies or comparative
inquiries into the phenomena from the decades of the long digital
revolution of journalism. The conference welcomes papers that examine
the digital journalism histories of the global ‘centers’ and we
especially encourage inquiries from the ‘peripheries’ of digital
journalism development and scholarship.
*Possible topics include, but are not limited to*
- Mythologies of technology: reconsidering ‘dead’ and ‘new’ technologies
in journalism
- Transforming social control in the digitized newsroom: investigating
separation and integration tendencies
- Re-configuring the labour process in digital journalism: between
standardisation and creativity of digital news production
- Digital platforms, tools and practices in journalism: from Teletext,
CD-ROMS and Minitel to www, smartphones and social media
- Changing skillsets in digital journalism: deskilling, reskilling,
upskilling newsworkers
- (Dis)continuities of forms and genres in journalism
- Labour relations of digital journalism: standardisation,
precarisation, entrepreneurialism
- Liquefied identities of digital journalism: boundary work between
‘online’ and ‘offline’ journalists, ‘professional’ and ‘citizen’
journalists, journalists and ‘technologists’, ‘journalists’ vs ‘bloggers’
- Re-inventing journalistic profiles: from ‘mouse monkeys’, ‘meta
journalists’ to ‘robot journalists’
- Digitized audiences between participation and commodification
- Business models of digital journalism: from legacy media ecosystem to
platform capitalism
- Ethical, legal and regulatory issues of digital journalism: from www
to automation
- Particular online journalistic genres moving online: digital music,
sport, food journalism
*Technical details and important dates*
Deadline for submitting abstracts and panel proposals is October 20,
2021 (CET).
Please submit all submissions via this online form:
https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScLTg4do6bMlFrDrcxL6MJJJqudnWJtR9rrRxrRSgtUoo0qiA/viewform
Panel proposals should consist of 3 or 4 papers, and all the paper
abstracts belonging to a proposed panel should be submitted individually
through the form. The maximum length for panel and paper abstracts is
400 words.
Conference talks will be 15 minutes long followed by 5 minute long
discussions.
Further information will be found on the constantly updated conference
website: https://sites.google.com/view/hodj2022/news
*Organizers and contact information*
The conference will be held at Budapest University of Technology and
Economics (BME), and is jointly organised by the Department of Sociology
and Communications, Faculty of Economic and Social Sciences, BME and the
Social Communication Research Centre, University of Ljubljana (UL).
Should you have any questions, please feel free to contact the organizers:
Dr. Tamas Tofalvy, Associate Professor (BME): (tofalvy.tamas /at/ gtk.bme.hu)
Dr. Igor Vobič, Associate Professor (UL): (igor.vobic /at/ fdv.uni-lj.si)
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