Archive for 2023

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[Commlist] Call for chapters: Edited Collection on Social Media Crises

Tue Dec 05 11:42:14 GMT 2023





This is a reminder that the deadline to submit a chapter proposal for /The Culture of the Social Media Crisis: Causes, Impact, Consequences /is approaching (December 15).

*CALL FOR CHAPTERS for Edited Collection on the Culture of the Social Media Crisis *

Authors are invited to contribute chapters to an upcoming edited collection on crisis communication and social media: /The Culture of the Social Media Crisis: Causes, Impact, Consequences/. The book’s chapters will explore the cultural rise in prominence of the social media crisis, its unique characteristics, and its place in the broader academic field of crisis communication. This book project is under contract with University of Toronto Press and is anticipated to be published in 2025.

Social media crises have caught organizations, prominent and everyday people, and public relations practitioners off-guard despite crisis communication being a subject of academic study for many decades. In recent years, we have seen a surge in social media crises, with controversies ranging from celebrity scandals to political conflicts to public health debates. Controversial posts are causing organizations to spend considerable resources dealing with social media threats to their reputations and, ultimately, bottom lines. High-profile individuals face mobs of users—some real, some bots—who demand real-world consequences for Twitter, Facebook, TikTok, and Instagram posts that they don’t like. Even everyday people face reputational damage and job loss from social media posts that offend some group of social media users somewhere in the world.

This edited collection will explore the nature, characteristics, and consequences of this new kind of crisis that originates on social media platforms. While crises in the ‘real world’ involving bodies, products, or the natural environment have been studied extensively, online crises rooted in language, image, and video remain relatively unexplored as a cultural phenomenon. Yet these situations can also cause significant damage to images, reputations, operations, and livelihoods.

The editor seeks chapters that examine case studies and apply or develop theoretical approaches to understand what makes the social media crisis unique.

In addition to the academic field of crisis communication proper, the editor welcomes perspectives from various disciplines, including but not limited to communication studies, cultural studies, management, political science, law, sociology, psychology, healthcare, and media studies.

The following list offers possible topics to consider; however, it is by no means an exhaustive one, and submissions are welcomed on any aspect that falls within the scope of this book:

  * Online political divides, polarization, and tribalism
  * Conditions for the emergence of the social media crisis
  * How a paracrisis turns into a crisis
  * Public health/pandemic social media crises
  * Online debates over meaning and language that lead to a crisis
  * The role of bots in fomenting crisis situations
  * Old tweets that cause new problems
  * User attention to problematic social media content
  * Comparisons between the social media crisis and the offline crisis
  * The role of online mobs in crisis formation
  * The place of social media algorithms in online crisis development
  * Social media crises and the erosion of institutional trust
  * The debate over online cancel culture
  * Online outrage and crisis
  * Real-life consequences of social media crises as reasonable or
    overblown
  * Legal, regulatory, and ethical implications
  * The discursive nature of this kind of crisis (text, image, video)
  * The influence of a social media crisis on public perceptions and
    opinions
  * The role of social media influencers
  * Artificial intelligence in faking online crisis situations
    (Midjourney, ChatGPT etc.)
This edited collection will provide new directions for researchers and emphasize recent case studies to illuminate theory.

Please submit a CV and a chapter proposal of about 500 words to the editor, Duncan Koerber, at (dkoerber /at/ brocku.ca) by December 15, 2023. Proposals should explain the overall argument or point of the chapter, describe the case(s) to be examined, outline the chapter’s sections, and explain the chapter’s connection to crisis communication theories and/or prior research. Authors will be notified of proposal acceptance by February 1, 2024. Full chapters of about 6000 words (excluding references) will be due by June 1, 2024.





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