Archive for 2025

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[Commlist] Seminar Series: Centre for the Study of Conflict, Emotion and Social Justice

Mon Jan 13 23:18:49 GMT 2025




The Centre for the Study of Conflict, Emotion and Social Justice (CESJ) at Bournemouth University invites you to its 2025 seminar series:


ECHOES OF CONNECTION: A HISTORY OF TECHNOLOGY AND TRANSFORMATION - PROF. RICARDO GOMEZ (UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON) Wed, 5 Feb; 4-5pm (UK time) Gomez's latest book of creative nonfiction explores the impact of information and communication technologies on human lives over the past century, focusing on their role in shaping societies, communities, and individuals. Told through the experiences of three families across the US, Colombia, and Senegal, the story spans from the telegraph to artificial intelligence, revealing how technology both bridges and deepens divides. By narrating the evolution of ICTs from the perspective of the artifacts themselves, the book highlights the complex relationship between innovation and human capacity. Themes such as the digital divide, cultural identity, and cross-generational adaptation are examined, providing a rich, multidimensional exploration of our interconnected world.


BEYOND EXCEPTIONALISM AND AREA STUDIES: TRANSNATIONAL FEMINIST PERSPECTIVES ON ANTI-GENDER/FEMINIST DISCOURSES AND POLITICS IN THE MIDDLE EAST AND EUROPE - PROF. NADJE AL-ALI (BROWN UNIVERSITY)
Wed, 19 Feb, 4-5pm (UK time)
Global developments have illustrated that gender norms, discourses and policies can no longer be sidelined in history and political analysis. Furthermore, the rise of right-wing movements and societal polarization have challenged previously held ways of categorizing the world. This talk takes a comparative and transnational feminist perspective to address the following questions: What are the similarities and differences when looking at anti-gender/anti-feminist discourses and policies across the Middle East, Europe and the U.S.? How do our positionalities impact on the ways we talk about and analyze right wing anti-feminist propaganda and mobilization? What academic and political strategies might help to shift the mainstreaming of anti-gender discourses and politics?


THE 5W+1H OF MANAGING EMOTIONS IN JOURNALISM - DR. MAJA SIMUNJAK (MIDDLESEX UNIVERSITY) Wed, 5 Mar; 4-5pm (UK time) Journalism increasingly involves high emotional labour, reflecting the 'emotional turn' in journalism. Journalists routinely encounter a variety of stressors in their daily work and must effectively navigate the emotions that accompany these challenges to sustain their well-being and professional performance. However, it is uncommon to see detailed accounts of emotions experienced in journalism, or how to manage these while doing the job. In this talk, the author of ‘Managing emotions in journalism: A guide to enhancing resilience’ explores what – does it mean to manage emotions in journalism, who – is doing it, where – does it happen, when – is this management necessary, why – is it important, and how – it can be done.


STORYTELLING, MEMORY AND TRAUMA IN THE PALESTINIAN CASE - DR. FARAH ABOUBAKR (UNIVERSITY OF EDINBURGH)
Wed, 19 Mar; 4-5pm (UK time)
Although popular culture and its artistic forms of expression have usually been deemed as epiphenomenal in Middle Eastern Studies in general and in Palestine Studies in particular, the talk explores the idea of how Palestinian popular culture through storytelling is foundational means for negotiating power and resistance, social interaction, and identity. The complex interconnection between memory, trauma, and culture as manifested through oral literature, mainly folktales, will be discussed.

RUPTURED CITIZENSHIP AND MICRO-MOBILIZATION DYNAMICS: ASSESSING GEOGRAPHIC DIFFERENCES IN IRAQI YOUTH MOBILIZATION IN THE TISHREEN MOVEMENT - SARAH ANNE RENNICK (ARAB REFORM INITIATIVE) Wed, 2 Apr; 4-5pm (UK time) Despite its post-sectarian nature and inclusive action frames, Iraq’s youth-led mass uprising, the 2019 Tishreen movement, was largely centered in Baghdad and southern Iraq, failing to garner notable mobilization in the north. These geographic differences in Iraqi youth mobilization can in part be explained by different political subjectivities that emerged because of breakdowns to the post-2003 political order, producing diverging micro-mobilization dynamics. Intersecting post-conflict studies and social movement theory, this seminar will explore post-conflict citizenship agendas to conceptualize micro-level processes of mobilization, and in particular mobilization potential, revealing how shifting contexts at the macro-level produced new narratives and identities that drove/hindered mobilization.

STIGMA, UNPAID LABOUR AND THE MYTH OF WORKLESSNESS - DR. JAMES MORRISON (UNIVERSITY OF STIRLING) Wed, 7 May; 4-5pm (UK time) Tackling ‘economic inactivity’ to boost productivity is emerging as a defining mission of the Labour government. After years of being castigated as ‘scroungers’ under the Conservatives, sick and disabled benefit recipients are braced for a renewed policy push to draw them back into employment – the only change being a promised softening of anti-welfare discourse. But what resemblance do media-political narratives around ‘worklessness’ bear to the lived realities of people who save taxpayers billions by working as volunteers or unpaid carers – despite often being disabled themselves? James Morrison previews his upcoming book ‘Inactive’: Stigma, Unpaid Labour and the Myth of Worklessness.

FAKE NARRATIVES IN NEWS: A MULTIMODAL APPROACH THOUGH AI AND DISCOURSE ANALYSIS - DR. CHIAO-I TSENG (UNIVERSITY OF GOTHENBURG) & PROF. JOHN A. BATEMAN (UNIVERSITY OF BREMEN) Wed, 28 May; 4-5pm (UK time) Audiovisual news reports have involved audiovisual, narratives forms. Since narrative forms are inherently interpretative and evaluative, the critical assessment of the use of such forms in manipulative and dis-informative news reporting is an urgent priority. Based on the project “Fake Narratives”, this seminar presents a framework for investigating large-scale narrative patterns in audiovisual news reporting on Covid and the Ukraine War from several contrasting German news channels, spanning from mainstream to right-wing media. Combining empirical multimodal discourse analysis and computational methods the framework studies news narrative strategies, such as elite endorsement, emotionalization, message fragmentation and individualization of laypersons.


All seminars take place on Zoom via this link:
https://bournemouth-ac-uk.zoom.us/j/82819388776?pwd=dnkyZzVCRENIODZuNm94MmhBa08wdz09 Meeting ID: 828 1938 8776 Passcode: M+M^KpM9

Watch our previous seminars here:
https://www.bournemouth.ac.uk/research/centres-institutes/centre-study-conflict-emotion-social-justice/cesj-seminar-series

Follow our activities on the centre's website, Facebook and LinkedIn:
https://www.bournemouth.ac.uk/research/centres-institutes/centre-study-conflict-emotion-social-justice
https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100083200665625
https://www.linkedin.com/company/centre-for-the-study-of-conflict-emotion-and-social-justice/

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