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[ecrea] CALL FOR PAPERS: Othering Race and Ethnicity in Media and Popular Culture
Tue Aug 14 06:33:08 GMT 2012
Networking Knowledge special issue
Othering Race and Ethnicity in Media and Popular Culture
DEADLINE FOR ABSTRACTS (500 words max): 24 September 2012
NOTIFICATION OF ACCEPTANCE: 1 October 2012
DEADLINE FOR FULL PAPERS (6,000 – 8,000 words): 1 February 2013
Networking Knowledge seeks papers from postgraduate students and early
career researchers to explore, from a range of theoretical perspectives,
how race and ethnicity are Othered in terms of media content, production
and reception.
In their analysis of postcolonial media culture in Britain, Brunt and
Cere (2011) argue that contemporary media content and production are
shaped by past circumstances which must be considered to develop a
comprehensive understanding of the media. The journal therefore
particularly welcomes original contributions which explore the ways in
which past – or other – circumstances have shaped contemporary media
production, content and reception of Others, and how these may be
theorized. Papers may critically analyse the ‘Othering’ of race and
ethnicity by engaging with a variety of fields and theories, such as
critical discourse analysis, postcolonial theory, anthropology, history,
sociology, globalization, law and civil rights, international relations,
or multiculturalism. Studies which combine traditional media theories
with other theories of meaning will be particularly welcome. The journal
also seeks to interrogate the political implications and wider cultural
politics involved in the contemporary structures which determine how
race and ethnicity are ‘Othered’.
Possible topics include, but are not limited to:
- Commercial imperatives and the production of Others
- Historical analyses of Others: a permanent category?
- Others as threats
- The exotic Other
- Postcolonial critiques of ‘Othering’
- Institutional racism in media production
- Islamophobia, terrorism and war
- The ‘Other’ as ‘Us’
- Othering and reporting conflict
- Reporting events about Other countries
- Othering in the Arab and Other ‘springs’
- ‘Radicalisation’ of Others
- Public service broadcasting and Othering
- Lived experiences of Others
- Visibility and invisibility, inclusion and marginalization
- Accessing mainstream discourses
- Diversity initiatives in the media
- Race, ethnicity and subcultural practices
- Anti-racist media activism
Papers may be based on any media genre and format, including news media,
television, film, music, photography, radio, videogames, and new media,
including social networking sites. Contributions should be critical,
rather than descriptive, and engage with theoretical debates. Although
the journal expects that most contributions will critically focus on
Western processes of Othering, it would also like to encourage the
submission of studies which explore this concept based on non-Western
contexts.
Abstracts and enquiries should be sent to the issue’s guest editor Ruth
Sanz at (rsanzs /at/ dmu.ac.uk).
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