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[eccr] Call for Papers for a workshop "Media Change - Community Change" 10-11 of October 2003
Thu Jul 03 11:02:08 GMT 2003
Estimated Colleagues,
Please distribute the following call for papers for a workshop in
English and German Language to the members of the eccr mailing list.
Thank you very much
Friedrich Krotz
Call for Papers for the Workshop
„Media Change – Community Change“
Organising Body: The Media, Public Sphere and Gender Section with the
Media Sociology Section of the DGPuK (Fachgruppen Medien,
Öffentlichkeit, Geschlecht und Soziologie der Medienkommunikation der DGPuK)
Date/Place: 10th – 11th October 2003 in Münster, Conference Centre
Franz-Hitze-Haus
Organising Team: Dr. Andreas Hepp; PD Dr. Jutta Röser
The relationship between media changes and changes within communities
can be seen as an implicit starting point for a multiplicity of
theoretical and empirical work. As far as earlier television audience
research is concerned these studies focused on the interconnectedness of
actions within the media and the constitution of communities as well as
gender positions within the domestic context. Qualitative research into
the content of various mass media components described these as playing
a vital part in the construction of imagined communities such as the
nation. Together with the increasing orientation towards popular culture
within media and communication studies, interpretive and fan communities
of popular genres became objects of study. The research into cyber
culture and network communication examined how the internet facilitates
the development of (new) virtual communities. Today, the tendency
towards personal technologies changes conceptualisations of familial,
partnership and job communities. Following on from this, mobile
communication research is concerned with the question of how community
structures change if media induced communicative connectivity is far
more linked with people than with places. In all these approaches,
communities are understood as being more or less stable social
formations (however, not in an essentialist vein). Generally, the
relationship between media change and community change has been in many
ways a topic within the media and communication studies for years.
It is the aim of the workshop to deal with this so far rather ‘implicit’
topic of media and communication studies more explicitly. That means on
the one hand to problematise various theories regarding the relationship
between media changes and changes within communities. On the other hand,
we want to discuss recent as well as ‘classical’ empirical studies from
which to draw out processes of change in relation to media and
community. The range of topics which the workshop would like to discuss,
is, however, broad:
- How can the two concepts of media change and community change be
theorised – especially in relation to one another? What can be gained
from recent theoretical developments such as the theory of connectivity?
- The use of which methods seems appropriate to empirically describe the
processional character of media and community change? Which methodical
challenges does the necessary ‘diachronic’ perspective pose here?
- The domestic context, the ‘home’, is the key place to acquire
knowledge about media technologies: How do domestic communities change
according to the introduction of new media technologies, the tendency
towards personalised technologies and the multiplication of the
respective appliances? Which of these bear subsequent consequences, for
example, for the interaction within the family circle (i.e.
fragmentation of the family), the generational relationships within the
family (i.e. facilitation and hindrance of communality through the
media) and for gender relationships (changes within the organisation of
space, gendered use of media technology)?
- If generational changes equal communal changes, what role does the
media and the changes within (forms of) communication play there? Which
roles do the different forms of media play in the existing opposition
between youth cultures and communities of elderly people? Or do the
increasingly mediated popular and leisure cultures facilitate communal
forms beyond generational divisions?
- To what extent does media change contribute to changes within
political communities? Does, for example, the introduction of digital
media lead to changes within the spaces available for political
engagement? What differences can be seen between different national,
regional, local and deterritorial levels?
- How has the globalisation of mass communication (which lead to a
cultural change) contributed to processes of community change? Which new
forms of communality developed and which processes of change can be
envisaged? Which challenges can be deduced for transcultural communication?
These and other questions will be discussed in the above workshop. Our
aim is to develop perspectives for research into the relationship
between media changes and changes within communities. The workshop is
internationally oriented which means that it is possible to present
one’s paper in English or German. A review scheme will operate to select
from the submitted abstracts. Selected abstracts will be presented as
papers during the workshop.
The workshop starts on Friday, 10th October 2003, and finishes on
Saturday, 11th October 2003, in the Conference Centre Franz-Hitze-Haus
in Münster. Until 31st July 2003, extended abstracts (2-3 pages) can be
submitted to Andreas Hepp or Jutta Röser who can also be contacted if
questions arise.
Contact:
Dr. Andreas Hepp
TU Ilmenau, Institut für Medien- und Kommunikationswissenschaft
FG Medienwissenschaft
PF 100565
D-98684 Ilmenau
Tel. +49- 3677-694670
E-Mail: (Andreas.Hepp /at/ tu-ilmenau.de)
or
PD Dr. Jutta Röser
Universität Zürich, Institut für Publizistikwissenschaft und
Medienforschung (IPMZ)
Andreasstrasse 15
CH-8050 Zürich
(From 7/7/03: Wiener Str.22, D-48145 Münster, Germany)
Tel. +41-1-634-4683, -4661 (from 7/7/03: +49-0251-34932)
E-Mail: (roeserj /at/ aol.com)
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