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[Commlist] Call for abstracts for seminar on extremism on social media
Tue Feb 13 18:23:54 GMT 2024
/Call for abstracts/
//
The insurrection against the US Capitol on January 6th 2021 marked a
culmination of online conspiracy theories, including PizzaGate and
QAnon, and different strands of misinformation about election results,
COVID-19 vaccines, and climate change, persistently circulating on
social media. Significantly, insurrectionists did not come together
under the banner of a single ideological cause. Instead, today’s
landscape of extremism is shaped by what researchers and intelligence
services variably call ‘salad bar extremism’, ‘fused extremism’, ‘DIY
extremism’ or ‘hybridized extremism’.
The algorithmic and transmedial infrastructure of social media plays a
significant role in the development and spread of many conspiratorial
and extremist narratives online and enables them to enter the mainstream
public discourse, accelerated by intense news reporting in legacy media.
Under these conditions, seemingly everything can be adopted into
conspiracy narratives which cater to both nationalist right wing
extremists, religious fundamentalists, New Age bohemians, “yoga mums”
and anti-authorities skeptics across the political spectrum.
This seminar invites presentations that consider the hybridity of this
contemporary landscape of conspiracy theories, misinformation and
extremism theoretically and/or empirically, e.g., through case studies
of specific online communities and narratives, memetic media,
influencers and celebrities on social media.
Topics may include, but are not limited to:
-Extremism and memetic culture
-Extremism on different platforms (Facebook, X, TikTok, 4Chan, Telegram
etc.)
-The relationship between conspiracy theories, fandom and popular culture
-Algorithms and the spread of hate and false information
- Genres and aesthetics of extremism and conspiracy-content
- Platform policy and content moderation
- Anonymity online and ‘secret’ or hidden online spaces
- Digital affordances and digital practices in communities engaged
with conspiracy theories, misinformation and extremism.
Please submit your abstract of max 200 words and an author bio of max
100 words to organizers Associate Professor Line Nybro Petersen and
Postdoc Mikkel Bækby Johansen at (socialmediaextremismseminar /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(socialmediaextremismseminar /at/ gmail.com)> before March 1, 2024.
Participants will be notified by March 15, 2024.
The seminar is part of the ongoing Horizon Europe-project (2023-2026):
SMIDGE: Social Media Narratives: Addressing Extremism in Middle Age led
by UCPH and Du Monfort University, Leicester. Follow the SMIDGE-project
at: www.smidgeproject.eu <http://www.smidgeproject.eu>
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