Call for Papers: Special Issue of Communication Studies
Discourse of the Middle East: Communication, Culture, Media
Special issue editor: Mehdi Semati (Northern Illinois University)
Submission Deadline: March 1, 2010
Submissions are invited for a special issue of 
Communication Studies offering a communicative 
inquiry into the (re)emergence of 'the Middle 
East' in the Western/Northern political and 
cultural imaginaries. Among the factors that 
have contributed to this (re)emergence are the following:
ï??     the end of the Cold War and its bipolar geopolitical framework
ï??     the role of the regionâ??s energy resources in the world economy
ï??     the possibility of a new nuclear arms race in the Middle East
ï??     regional conflicts and Euro-American involvements therein
ï??     the Euro-American Middle East foreign policies
ï??     the terrorism complex
ï??     immigration and population movements
ï??     globalization
ï??     the proliferation of media in the Middle East
ï??     the flow and contra-flow of media and 
cultural forms to and from the region
ï??     the explosion of communication 
technologies and digital networks worldwide
ï??     growing middle classes and their demands in the region
ï??     domestic cultures and global youth cultures
ï??     the proliferation of Western media 
outlasts with insatiable appetite for content in 
the form of commentary, analysis, op-eds and controversies
ï??     the rise of religious fundamentalisms worldwide
ï??     the expansion of social movements and their global audiences
ï??     a more vociferous local and global 
constituency for issues in gender and human rights
On the one hand, communication media and 
cultures, and communication technologies have 
played their role in these developments and 
their respective political, cultural and 
ideological frameworks. On the other, these 
developments have contributed to the formation 
of the Western political and cultural 
imaginaries in which â??the Middle Eastâ?? is an 
intelligible and constructed object in various discourses.
This special issue is devoted to the exploration 
of these discourses, their epistemological and 
ontological formations and histories, the 
politics of their formations and the functions 
they might perform in a variety of domains. Here 
the concept of â??discourseâ?? is deployed 
broadly, inviting contributions from diverse 
intellectual, methodological and disciplinary 
affiliations and orientations that have 
contributed to communication and cultural 
studies. Regardless of their orientations, the 
contributions are expected to address the 
literatures and problematics of concern to 
communication, media and cultural studies. The 
aforementioned list of developments, as they 
relate to such problematics, suggests a range of 
topics of interest to this special issue.
Queries regarding the special issue may be 
directed to guest editor Mehdi Semati 
((msemati /at/ niu.edu)) or journal editor Kimberly Powell ((commstudies /at/ luther.edu)).
Submission guidelines:
Manuscripts must be prepared in accordance with 
the most recent edition of the Publication 
Manual of the American Psychological Association 
or the Chicago Manual of Style. Submissions 
should contain no more than 7500 words total 
(including tables, references, endnotes, and 
appendices). Send an electronic file of the 
manuscript prepared for blind review in MWord or 
rtf and a separate file with author contact 
information, title of the manuscript, and brief 
author bio to (commstudies /at/ luther.edu). Additional 
journal guidelines are available at 
http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/titles/10510974.asp.
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