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[Commlist] CfP_ Lisbon Winter School | Media and Ambivalence January 2024
Fri Sep 15 15:28:09 GMT 2023
*4^th Lisbon Winter School for the Study of Communication*
*Media and Ambivalence*
**
*9-12 January 2024*
The 4^th Lisbon Winter School for the Study of Communication takes a
comparative and global approach to the study of media and ambivalence.
Jointly organized by the Faculty of Human Sciences (Universidade
Católica Portuguesa) and the Center for Media@Risk at the Annenberg
School for Communication (University of Pennsylvania), in cooperation
with the School of Journalism and Communication (Chinese University of
Hong Kong), and the Helsinki Institute for Social Sciences and
Humanities (University of Helsinki), the 4^th Lisbon Winter School
offers an opportunity for doctoral students and early career
post-doctoral researchers to strategize around the study of media and
ambivalence together with senior scholars in the field.
*Call for Applications*
It is perhaps paradoxical that media scholars tend to regard ambivalence
in ambivalent ways. Many maintain that ambivalence undercuts and
undermines the media environments it inhabits, introducing a level of
uncertainty that obscures not only multiple aspects of the media’s
workings—including its messages, roles, technologies, practices and
effects—but also what is most patterned and exceptional about the media
writ large. Others see ambivalence as a necessary complication of the
tired and overused binaries of late modernity, sustaining what the
American novelist F. Scott Fitzgerald described as the “test of a
first-rate intelligence,” whose “ability to hold two opposed ideas in
the mind at the same time, and still retain the ability to function”
would produce generative opportunities built around the “the improbable,
the implausible, often the impossible.”
Regardless, then, of how positively or negatively scholars feel about
ambivalence, its presence is a clear component of media environments
everywhere. But what kind of presence does it have? What are its primary
attributes and pitfalls? In what ways does ambivalence make media
environments better or worse? In what ways does it foster or complicate
widely-adopted notions of media practices, processes, production,
consumption and effects? How does it foster resistance and under which
conditions?
This Winter School will examine the pairing of media and ambivalence in
all its recognizable forms. Orienting to the broad spread of ways in
which ambivalence can be understood to inhabit the media, it aims to
develop a fuller understanding of why ambivalence is such a longstanding
inhabitant of media environments. Possible questions stretch across the
wide range of entry points for contemplating the media that allow for
media representation and processing, media use and media refusal, media
production and consumption. They include, how do the media and
ambivalence shape each other? What role do the media and associated
technologies play in structuring ambivalence, and what role does
ambivalence play when associated with the media? Under which conditions
does ambivalence emerge? How is it represented and where? How is it
recognized and by whom? What impact does it have on media fare, the
representation of marginalized groups or the shape of audience
engagement? How does it affect the capacity to form identities, make
informed decisions or embrace polarization? How does it figure in
decisions to refuse or reject the media? How is ambivalence being
weaponized in current political climates, and to what end? How has it
been weaponized in the past?
*We welcome proposals by doctoral students and early career
post-doctoral researchers from all over the world *to discuss the
intertwined relation between media and ambivalence in different
geographies and temporalities. The list below illustrates some topics
for possible consideration. Other topics dealing with media and
ambivalence are also welcome:
·Ambivalence towards media platforms, content, practices or effects
·Ambivalence and AI
·Techniques to counter ambivalence
·Ambivalence and identity formation
·Ambivalence and human rights
·Promoting ambivalent representations of the past
·Ambivalence in the public arena in specific national or regional contexts
·Ambivalent discourses on science and climate change
·Ambivalent discourses on racism, misogyny, classism, settler colonialism
·Ambivalence and journalism
·Ambivalence and popular culture
·Resistance to media, including media rejection, media detox, pushback
on social media, news avoidance or domestic practices to control media usage
·Children and media ambivalence
·Ambivalence, media and imaginative future
·Ambivalence and conflict
·Ambivalence and overload
·…
*PAPER PROPOSALS*
Proposals should be sent to *(lisbonwinterschool /at/ gmail.com)*
<mailto:(lisbonwinterschool /at/ gmail.com)>**no later than 30 September 2023
and include a paper title, extended abstract in English (700 words),
name, e-mail address, institutional affiliation and a brief bio (max.
100 words) mentioning ongoing research. Applicants will be informed of
the result of their submissions by mid-October.**
**
*FULL PAPER SUBMISSION *
Presenters will be required to send in full papers (max. 20 pages, 1.5
spacing) by 15 December 2023.
*CONFIRMED KEYNOTES*
Juliane Prade-Weiss, Ludwig Maximilian University Munich
Larry Gross, Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism,
University of Southern California
Patrícia Dias, Catholic University of Portugal
Valerie Traub, University of Michigan
*More to be announced *
**
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