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[ecrea] CfP: ECPR panel “social movements and memories”
Thu Jan 09 01:15:07 GMT 2014
Please find below the call for papers for the panel "Social Movements
and Memories", proposed to the ECPR general conference 2014.
Please feel free to distribute this call to interested colleagues.
Please send paper abstracts (max. 250 words) by 26 January 2014 to:
(p.daphi /at/ hu-berlin.de) or (lorenzo.zamponi /at/ eui.eu)
Social Movements and Memories
Chair: Priska Daphi (Humboldt University Berlin) (p.daphi /at/ hu-berlin.de)
Discussant: Lorenzo Zamponi (European University Institute)
(lorenzo.zamponi /at/ eui.eu)
Though large protests often surprise observers, they hardly start from
scratch. Mostly, they are rooted in previous mobilisations with respect
to their diagnostic framing, forms of organisation, and repertoires.
Memories of previous mobilisations crucially influence which activities
are considered helpful or successful and which are not. Hence, analysing
memories allows crucial insights into social movement dynamics and
continuity. Memories are, at the same time, outcomes of mobilisation and
significant factors in shaping further mobilisation.
In the last few years, the interest in collective memory has been
constantly growing among scholars of contentious politics. In this
context, memory studies and in particular the sociology of memory based
on the seminal work of Maurice Halbwachs, have become fundamental tools
in advancing our understanding of social movements. These approaches
provide useful insights into the symbolic construction of the reality in
which collective action takes place. On the other hand, contentious
politics approaches inform the growing number of studies on the
conflictual dynamics of memory.
This panel aims to discuss the role of memories in social movements. How
does the past and its public representation influence mobilisation? How
do social movements participate in the construction of public memory?
How and why do some specific events from the past become fundamental
symbols for social and political contention, while others do not? How
does diffusion of practices, symbols, and repertoires of mobilisation
work over time?
We welcome submissions coming from different disciplinary fields, in the
attempt to bring together the scholarships on social movements and
memory studies. Each abstract will be evaluated for: quality and clarity
of the research question; methodological precision of the comparative
approach; theoretical originality of the contribution and discussion of
available knowledge; relevance and pertinence to the panel’s theme.
--
Lorenzo Zamponi
PhD Candidate/Researcher
European University Institute
Department of Political and Social Sciences
Via dei Roccettini 9
I-50014 - San Domenico di Fiesole (FI)
Italia
http://www.eui.eu
(lorenzo.zamponi /at/ eui.eu)
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