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[ecrea] CFP - Critical Media Studies and the “Future of Ne ws” Debates
Tue Sep 03 21:42:13 GMT 2013
Special Issue of Communication Review
Perhaps more than any other major media genre, news media appear to be
facing a pivotal historic moment as mounting debts, declining revenues,
and new competition and formats challenge the viability of “traditional”
news formats. The future of news may not look much like its recent
past. This situation raises many questions regarding the survival and
mutation of news formats and styles, the structure of news
organizations, the business models that will support reporting, and the
working relationships between paid and unpaid news journalists.
Robert McChesney and John Nichols have described the contemporary moment
as a “critical junction” for journalism: a moment when choices made now
will likely set a course for the development of news media that will be
difficult to change for coming decades. Given the present
destabilization of news media and the centrality of journalism to
democratic governance, it is not surprising that the “the future of
news” has become a meme organizing an endless number of blog posts,
articles, and conferences. Business leaders, journalists, media
activists, policymakers, and indeed a number of scholars have been
contributing to this public discussion. Beyond the strong work produced
by media policy scholars, there has not been a great deal of research
under the sign of “critical media studies” in these crucial debates.
Discussions about the future of news offer an opportunity to imagine new
modes of circulating stories about public life and collectively building
more democratic communication systems. For critical and cultural media
scholars devoted to “conjunctural” analysis and participation in public
struggles over the appropriation of emerging media potential, this
moment should not be missed.
This CFP asks for contributors to this special issue to bring
perspectives from critical media studies into the future of news debates
and to bring insights from those active in the debates to discussions in
critical media studies. We are also looking for contributors who can
integrate work from the political economy of journalism with cultural
approaches. Some of the topics that might be addressed include:
- Race, gender, class, sexuality, and the future of news.
- Changing concepts of “the popular” in the emerging news media.
- Fragmentation and stratification in online news.
- Rhetorical dimensions of the future of news debates.
- Critical media studies and normative thinking about news.
- The future of citizen journalism as popular culture.
- The role of public intellectuals in the future of news debates.
- The power of users and limits to that power in shaping online
journalism.
- How the cultural and social history of news can inform current
choices.
- Technophilia and technophobia in thinking about the news.
- News media as “technologies of citizenship.”
- Media reform activism and public discourse.
- What social activists and emerging movements seek in digital news.
Please contact Dr. Anthony Nadler (anadler /at/ ursinus.edu) if you have any
questions about this special issue. Submissions of abstracts of 500
words (maximum) should be sent to Dr. Mary Vavrus (vavru001 /at/ umn.edu).
Submission Dates:
Abstracts Due: January 1st, 2014
Notify Contributors: February 10th, 2014
Full Manuscripts Due: July 1st, 2014
Reviews back by September 1st, 2014 (and access to guest contributors’
essay)
Revisions due by December 1st, 2014
--
Anthony Nadler
Assistant Professor of Media and Communication Studies
Ursinus College
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