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[ecrea] Call for Papers A Question of Power, 29-30 september 2011, Groningen Centre for Journalism Studies
Fri Apr 08 11:32:33 GMT 2011
*Call for Papers - A Question of Power* *- Conflict, agreement and
negotiation between journalists and their sources*
www.aquestionofpower.nl
(Groningen, September 29-30, 2011)
*UPDATE: Confirmed keynotes
Keynote speeches will be held by prof. Steven Clayman (Professor of
Sociology, University of California)
*sscnet.ucla.edu/soc/faculty/clayman/Site/Home.html
<http://www.sscnet.ucla.edu/soc/faculty/clayman/Site/Home.html> *and Åsa
Kroon-Lundell (Associate Professor in Media and Communication, Örebro
University).
*oru.se/English/Organization/School-of-Humanities-Education-and-Social-Sciences/PersonalPages/Asa-Kroon-Lundell/
<http://www.oru.se/English/Organization/School-of-Humanities-Education-and-Social-Sciences/PersonalPages/Asa-Kroon-Lundell/>*
*
In the two-day conference ‘A Question of Power’, the changing dynamics
between journalists and their sources will be addressed. Conventional
wisdom is that reporters want to obtain newsworthy or even spectacular
information while their sources aim for a profitable image. However,
among media researchers, be they from a political communications or
journalism studies perspective, there is consensus that this relation
has changed dramatically. Broadly discussed under the idea of
‘mediatization’, it is thought that media logic increasingly determines
the language in which public communication takes place. On the other
hand, the proliferation of social media allows sources to bypass
journalists to speak to audiences directly. Yet, the effect of these
changes on the journalist-source relationship is not clear-cut and the
question of how they affect the power relations between reporters and
their sources has so far remained largely neglected. Is the development
towards a ‘mediatized’ public sphere detrimental to meaningful political
debate? And what does it mean for the journalist’s autonomy? This
conference seeks to investigate how the journalist-source relationship
as we know it has transformed and still is transforming.
A special focus of this conference is on the changing norms and forms of
the journalistic interview, as it is an act central to modern news
journalism, embodying the complexity and struggles that exist between
reporter and source. This relation is most intensively researched in
political journalism, but the changes mentioned above are also relevant
for sports, celebrity, human interest and many other journalistic
categories. The form of the interview significantly influences the
reporter-source relation. For example, the difference between a
conversation with an eye-witness, broadcasted live on television, and a
multiple-page interview with a celebrity in a glossy magazine that
results from several hours of conversation clearly impacts the
interaction between interviewer and interviewee.
Comparison across time, media platforms and national environments is
welcome. Submissions that address the following aspects – and the
research challenges they present – are encouraged:
- Changes in the interaction between journalists and sources
- Mediatization and/or personalization in the interview
- Increasingly image-conscious and media-trained sources
- The position of the interview in different types of journalism
- Negotiating media content: do sources have a say?
- Changes in the role and position of the interview in the newsgathering
process
- The interview as an instrument of accountability
- The ‘celebrity journalist’
Guidelines:
Submissions are welcome in the form of a working abstract (maximum of
400 words). Participants are advised that the organizers seek to publish
a selection of essays from the workshop, either in a special issue of a
journal or in an edited volume.
Deadline:
Abstracts, along with full contact information (title, name,
affiliation, email), should be submitted to (aquestionofpower /at/ rug.nl)
<http://(aquestionofpower /at/ rug.nl)/> by april 15, 2011. If your proposal
is accepted, rough papers (approximately 4000-6000 words) are expected
by september 15, 2011.
Date:
September 29-30, 2011.
In this conference, keynote adresses will be combined with expert
workshops and discussion, the overall aim being a fruitful scholarly
debate. The conference will start on Thursday morning and will run until
Friday afternoon (around 3 p.m.). Accommodation will be provided for all
accepted paper contributors.
Workshop Coordinators:
Bas den Herder, Birte Schohaus, and Professor Marcel Broersma, Groningen
Centre for Journalism Studies, University of Groningen
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