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[ecrea] cfp Audience Section IAMCR Istanbul conference - July 13-17, 2011
Mon Jan 10 16:20:53 GMT 2011
CALL FOR PAPERS - reminder
Audience Section
(IAMCR Conference at Istanbul, Turkey, July 13-17, 2011)
The Audience Section invites submissions for its
open sessions at the IAMCR to be held in Istanbul
(Turkey) 2011 from July 13-17. The conference
theme for 2011 is ?Cities, Creativity, Connectivity?.
The Audience Section invites papers within this
overall theme and which reflect the Section?s
interest in new approaches and thinking to
audience research in the context of the urban,
the creative, and the network. The nature of
audiences as ?knowledge communities? and
producers, ethnographic approaches to researching
them and their embeddedness in everyday life, and
the extent to which traditional classifications
of audiences (masses, publics and markets) are
being challenged by the fluidity and ephemeral
nature of virtual and mobile audiences are
important concerns. The Section gives special
attention to reassessing the theories, methods
and issues that inform practices of audience
researchers. The Section encourages and aims to
inspire greater interest in exploring and
understanding audiences in diverse settings. The
Section also encompasses investigations of the
appropriateness of ?Western? and ?non-Western?
theories and methods in this diversity of settings.
Themes:
In addition to the open call for papers, we would
like to invite papers and proposals for panels
which address the following themes:
1. Embedded audiences
The contextualisation of audiencehood in everyday
life has opened up audience studies to look at
the audience as radically embedded, also in
space. The strong emphasis on the cultural turn
has in some cases diverted our attention from an
equally significant movement, which has been
labelled the spatial turn. Falkheimer and
Jansson's core questions (in Geographies of
Communication: The Spatial Turn in Media Studies)
touch upon the key issues of this spatial turn
for communication and media studies scholars: how
does communication produce space and how does
space produce communication. The translation to
audience studies raises questions about the
geography and spatiality of audiencehood: How do
audiences relate to private and public spaces,
how does the local, cultural, national (and the
translocal, transcultural and transnational)
relate to audiencehood, how are audiences
embedded and embodied in urban cultures, and how
do audiences function in online, networked, liminal and alternative spaces?
2. Resistant audiences, critical audiences, networked audiences
Central to the audience research tradition has
been a commitment to examining forms of
resistance and opposition exhibited by audiences.
Much of the seminal work of audience studies was
forged in a time of economic crisis through the
1970s and 1980s when forms of audience resistance
revealed deep-seated social tensions and a
charged political environment. Are similar
patterns evident in the current global economic
crisis? The locus of resistance has shifted from
the ideal-interpretative to the
material-productive. How does this affect the
nature of resistance? How do audiences network
and join forces in alternative interpretative
communities? How is the resistant and critical
audience manifest across today?s more complex
media landscape? How do media organizations and
professionals deal with the resistant and
critical audiences? And how is resistance, at the
level of the ideal-interpretative and the
material-productive incorporated and transformed
into compliance? We invite papers that look
across the full spectrum of audience experience
and examine diverse accounts of readings, modes
of engagement and mediation of audience relationships with the wider society.
3. Decentralizing the audience
Audience studies have often implicitly
centralized mediated experiences while at the
same time contextualizing, qualifying and
decentralizing the role of media in people?s
everyday lives. This tension has lead to an
over-emphasis on audience activity, both at the
level of media consumption and media
(self-)production, while more passive and
indifferent media uses and referential
interpretations are under-theorized and
under-researched. We invite papers that focus on
the everyday passiveness of (some) media
audiences and their acceptance of or indifference
to the media frameworks that are offered to them.
Moreover, we also call for papers that theorize
or research the sometimes limited importance
attributed to media in the everyday life of audience members.
4. Children as audiences
Children and young people represent are a hugely
important constituency for today?s media and are
frequently seen to be in the vanguard of new
audience trends and emerging practices of
consumption and engagement. As a distinct
audience grouping, children are the focus of
special public policy provisions including codes
regarding media content, professional guidelines
regarding children as subjects and participants
in the media, and a host of initiatives designed
to foster citizenship and creativity through
media literacy. Empirical work on children as
audiences remains scarce however and in this
stream we invite papers that explore audience
experience from the child?s perspective, and that
examine opportunities, risks, and challenges
faced by children in the current media
environment. Questions might include the extent
to which media literacies are evident in
children?s audience practices or how agency
supported or strengthened through civil society,
educational or governmental action?
Proposals for papers under any of the above can
be made by submitting an abstract of between
300-500 words long through the Conference
website. Each abstract must include title,
name(s), affiliation, institutional address and
email address of author(s). Proposals for
panels, containing details of each paper, are
also welcome. IAMCR accepts presentations in
English, French and Spanish. However, it is
requested that abstracts, if at all possible, be submitted in English.
For more on the submission of abstracts,
registration, theme, location, etc., please go to
http://iamcr2011istanbul.com or visit IAMCR at: http://iamcr.org/
The deadlines are as follows:
February 8, 2011: Submission of abstracts
(papers will be assessed by double blind review of abstracts).
March 25, 2011: announcement of acceptances.
June 3, 2011: Full papers due.
For enquiries or further information, please contact:
*Section Head : Nico Carpentier
Vrije Universiteit Brussel - Free University of Brussels
Centre for Studies on Media and Culture (CeMeSO)
Pleinlaan 2 - B-1050 Brussels ? Belgium
e: (nico.carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
*Deputy Head: Brian O?Neill
School of Media
Dublin Institute of Technology
Aungier Street, Dublin 2, Ireland
e: (brian.oneill /at/ dit.ie)
*Deputy Head: Toshie Takahashi
Department of Communication and Media Studies
Rikkyo University
3-34-1 Nishi-Ikebukuro, Toshima-ku, Tokyo, Japan 171-8501
e: (t-takahashi /at/ rikkyo.ac.jp)
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Nico Carpentier (Phd)
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Vrije Universiteit Brussel - Free University of Brussels
Centre for Studies on Media and Culture (CeMeSO)
Pleinlaan 2 - B-1050 Brussels - Belgium
T: ++ 32 (0)2-629.18.56
F: ++ 32 (0)2-629.36.84
Office: 5B.401a
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European Communication Research and Education Association
Web: http://www.ecrea.eu
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E-mail: (Nico.Carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
Web: http://homepages.vub.ac.be/~ncarpent/
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