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[ecrea] Call for book chapters "MAPPING THE ALTERNATIVE MEDIA IN TURKEY"
Tue Oct 09 08:07:04 GMT 2012
*/CALL FOR BOOK CHAPTERS/*
* *
*MAPPING THE ALTERNATIVE MEDIA IN TURKEY*
* *
*Editors: *
Bar?s, C,oban & Bora Ataman
* *
*Deadline for abstracts:*
1 December 2012
* *
We aim to map the alternative media in Turkey, which is varied in form,
structure and working styles such as "cracks", "rhizomes" and "fronts".
Similarly to what has occurred with the mainstream media, both large and
small examples of the alternative media, alongside their widespread
prevalence inside the country, have also already transcended the
national borders. We argue that mapping the alternative media, embracing
newspapers, radio and television channels, cinemas, blogs, forums and
platforms, essentially the full range of conventional and new media
organs and vehicles, is one of the most useful research approaches to
comprehending the nature of alternative politics in Turkey.
The alternative media works as a source of memory and an archive helping
to understand the historical and current structure of alternative
politics in Turkey. IT also gives voice to alternative ideologies and
politics and makes their political activities visible. In addition, the
alternative media, which mainly represents the "otherised", oppressed
and marginalised groups, forms the vanguard of struggle against the
hegemony and barbarism of the oppressive, globalized neo-liberal society.
Alternative media, as an umbrella term, applies to those media organs
which are typically bottom up organisations. In principle, their
organizational structures and decision making processes are democratic,
participatory, polyphonic and dialogic. Their opposition to the
mainstream media finds its roots, in its form and content, in social and
political struggles and is based in radical ideologies such as
anarchism, radical democracy and Marxism. The existence of alternative
media indicates the struggle to construct a truly democratic and free
sphere of communication from a number of broad perspectives, varying
from the idea of simply being independent from either the state or
capital, to being completely opposed to them. In this context, it is
also possible to claim that every organ of the alternative media, as a
centre of subaltern resistance, is part of a greater alternative
communication network.
This so-called alternative network (or networks) is/are the voice of
different political or social groups, communities, minorities or even
individuals at the grassroots level. Thus, they open the way for these
groups to actively participate in political and social life, as either
real "agents" or as "spectacles" in the field of symbolic struggle.
Therefore, individuals or groups can find opportunities to get involved
in both real and symbolic struggles for hegemony, not only as consumers,
but also as producers; as active agents.
Therefore, alternative media institutions either on the micro- or
macro-scale cannot be considered as combatants solely at the
informational level. In addition to their struggle to gather, record and
spread news and ideas concerning local, national and transnational
problems, they also provide a response to the establishment through real
political actions. It is not unusual to see their active participation
in protests, or even note that they hold the leadership positions in the
organisation of some of these dissident political actions. Therefore,
their active struggle with the hegemonic powers can also be considered
as an effort to create alternative political forms. More commonly
however, alternative media operate as the symbolic production centre of
alternative politics and as an incubation ground for the intellectual
and ideological constructs of social movements.
Alternative media, along with other dissident institutions, are seen as
paving the way for a brighter and more just future by being the voice of
the voiceless and contributing to the imagining of a different world.
Threatening so-called representative democracy by supporting
participatory social, cultural and political activities is also deemed
useful to this end. By engaging in such activities, they may be able to
cause the transformation of political culture in general. More
importantly, however, the ways in which subordinate constituents of the
society interpret politics and their own means of participation could
change in a positive manner. Moreover, such efforts may also lead to the
construction of efficient counter-public spheres alongside the more
common examples of alternative spaces.
Diverse anti-systemic, reformist and revolutionary ideological
orientations, varied political discourses and different modes of action
constituting the alternative media landscape mostly open up an
opportunity for the "oppressed" to actively participate in these
alternative political spaces that are, to a certain extent, diverse,
colourful, vivid and, most importantly, innately dialogic.
In this context, we argue that the "duty" of academia should be to
understand these alternatives without stigmatizing them as the source of
conflicts within the prevailing social system. After all, we as editors,
would like to study these initiatives since the imagining of an
alternative world may only be possible by embracing the oppressed and
their voice, even though the world around us is not particularly welcoming.
Abstracts of papers are sought on topics such as:
· Radical media (Struggling within legal parameters to push the limits
of the existing system
· Radical- militant media (affiliated with revolutionary organizations)
· Identity and rights-based media (Human rights, labour and trade-union
rights, gender, environment, ethnicity, struggles based on faith or
denomination
· Transnational and diaspora-based alternative media
· Independent, objective, opposition media
· Dissident voices, "cracks" in the mainstream media
However, it should be noted that the categories above do not refer to
independent categories with clear differences. It is possible to say
that; most examples of the alternative media operating in Turkey can be
included under more than one of the rubrics mentioned above.
Nevertheless, the alternative media organs in Turkey, despite a degree
of permeability in the boundaries that separate them, may be seen as
belonging more to one or another of the above-mentioned classifications,
therefore, these categories will constitute the bookʼs chapters.
Furthermore, we are mainly interested in the case studies (comparative
if possible) and empirical research possessing theoretical and
methodological clarity, and focusing on at least one of three basic
dimensions of media studies; such as "/Production/", "/Text/", or
"/Audience/", without missing the multi-layered and intertwined
relationships between these dimensions.
Abstracts of a maximum of 250 words in Turkish and English outlining the
topic, theoretical and methodological approach as well as the research
question, should be submitted to either Bar?s, C,oban
((bcoban /at/ dogus.edu.tr) <mailto:(bcoban /at/ dogus.edu.tr)>) or Bora Ataman
((bataman /at/ dogus.edu.tr) <mailto:(bataman /at/ dogus.edu.tr)>) until * December 1
2012*.
Announcement of the abstracts selected will be made by February 1 2013.
The deadline for full paper submissions is August 1, 2013
The editors are planning to publish book in Turkish and English and have
made an agreement with *Yordam, *to publish in January 2014.
After the evaluation of the abstracts, negotiations with foreign
publishing houses will begin for the English version.
Bar?s, C,oban & Bora Ataman (Eds.)
Deadline for Research Proposals: December 1, 2012.
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