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[ecrea] Call for Papers for Pre-conference “The Cultural Politics of Protest – Confronting Social Justice and Inequality in Communication Studies”
Fri Jan 10 22:35:10 GMT 2014
Call for Papers for Pre-conference “The Cultural Politics of Protest –
Confronting Social Justice and Inequality in Communication Studies”
Organized by the Ethnicity and Race in Communication (ERIC) Division and
endorsed by the Popular Communication Division
International Communication Association (ICA) 2014, Seattle, Washington, USA
Thursday, 22 May 2014
http://www.icahdq.org/conf/2014/culturalpoliticscfp.asp
Call for Papers
The 1999 WTO protests in Seattle - also known as 'The Battle of Seattle'
- was the largest and one of the most important public demonstrations in
US modern history. The protest became a critical intervention, in
drawing attention to a form of corporate governance that had previously
gone unquestioned, and more broadly, exposing the inner-workings of
neoliberal capitalism and the rampant inequality it produces across the
globe. What was striking about the protest was that it was not organized
by a specific group, or based upon a singular set of political aims.
Rather, the protest consisted of a disparate and diverse range of groups
and interests, from NGOs, anti-globalization activists, unions, and
environmentalists, who came together and organized one of the largest
protests of its kind, leading to the collapse of the WTO talks, and
arguably, the transformation of international trade.
Inspired by this moment, this pre-conference imagines what a similar
politics of protest and solidarity might look like for the social and
cultural movements of the 21st century. For many, the anti-globalization
movement lost its momentum following 9/11 and the shift in the agenda
towards an almost exclusive focus on terrorism, Islamism, and homeland
security. In light of this shift from corporate to ethnic governance,
the pre-conference asks, how do politics of ethnicity and race, as well
as its intersections with gender, class, sexuality etc. figure in the
new politics of protest?
The recent Occupy movement is clearly significant here, but the
preconference will consider also other forms of action and protest. The
purpose is to foreground issues of social justice and inequality in
communications studies. It is particularly interested in engaging
scholars researching social and cultural identities in relation to
popular communication and the media. Too often scholars in this field
have been criticized for contributing to a type of identity politics
that is trivial and marginal, and more decisively, neglects issues of
political economy and redistribution. This preconference aims to address
these criticisms directly and situate cultural and identity politics in
the political economy within which they are embedded. Drawing thematic
links to the 2014 conference theme, “Communication and ‘The Good Life’,”
the preconference explores how minority groups, through staging
different forms of protest against social injustice and inequality, can
build alliances and solidarities that lead to heightened forms of
community and collective flourishing.
The preconference is broadly based upon the following question: how can
communication studies of racial, ethnic, gendered and sexual identities
better address questions of social justice and inequality? For this
purpose, rather than full research papers, participants will be invited
to produce critical interventions in the shape of extended abstracts or
position papers lasting no longer than five minutes. Following keynote
talks, the one-day event will be made up of three roundtable sessions
that will each consist of around ten short presentations. Each of the
three sessions will be chaired by one of the preconference conveners and
include invited speakers who will deliver short position talks to open
the session. Based on the session themes, these invited speakers have
been selected from prominent names working in the field (academics
and/or activists-artists). In order to maximize discussion, the short
papers by presenters will be distributed beforehand.
The roundtable session themes are:
I. From Trayvon Martin to the March on Washington at 50: Race and Protest
In the wake of the July 2013 “not guilty” verdict in the trial of George
Zimmerman – charged with the shooting murder of unarmed African-American
teenager Trayvon Martin - in Florida, over 100 rallies and vigils were
held across the US to protest the verdict, and to push for the repeal of
so-called “Stand Your Ground” laws. Later that summer of 2013, the 50th
anniversary of the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom was
marked with a wide variety of speeches and performances reflecting upon
the half-century since the original event (and Martin Luther King’s
famous ”I Have a Dream Speech”). In this roundtable, authors are asked
to consider the role and use of contemporary protest and demonstration
in the service of highlighting/fighting racism and socio-economic
inequality, as well as the representation(s) of such demonstrations. The
examples given above – the Trayvon Martin vigils and the March on
Washington anniversary – are very different phenomena: one a more
spontaneous, grassroots response, the other a highly orchestrated,
potentially co-opted affair. Presenters are free to discuss all aspects
of protests, as well as their representation(s), and how they fit within
the sphere of not only Race & Ethnicity Studies, but also Popular
Communication.
I. Media, Human Rights and Social Justice
This session seeks to register and examine the construction and
articulation of human rights and social justice discourses in media
around the globe. To do so, it seeks papers that explore how, within
today’s highly mobile, networked media landscape, the relationship
between cultural production and consumption has been altered to
neutralize the state’s capacity to disregard ‘inconvenient’ human rights
violations and challenge the traditional press’s role as gatekeeper of
what gets defined and reported as a human rights issue and what does
not. Of central concern is the question: How have mobile, social and
entertainment forms of media served as tools through which human rights
are being defined, civic discourse constituted and activated, and social
justice sought, particularly as these tie into questions of recognition
and agency. Panelists will pursue this question by examining the
potential for human rights media to operate both vertically to produce
outcomes and horizontally to stimulate ‘structures of feeling’
(Galchinsky (2012) around the globe; that is, as vehicles to vertically
“reach up” from individuals and communities to challenge government
bodies and other power holders to enact new policy or take action, and
horizontally as tools through which citizens, activists, and artists
speak to each other, represent their concerns and seek recognition.
I. Popular Music and Radical Politics: Where are Today’s Protest Songs?
Taking the late 1970s and early 1980s as a point of departure, and in
particular Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five’s 1982 “The Message”
(widely considered to be the first ”political” rap song), in this
roundtable, authors are asked to address the question: “Where are
today’s Protest Songs?” Following in the footsteps of “The Message” rap
and hip hop artists such as Public Enemy, N.W.A., Ice Cube, Tupac, and
Mos Def continued the tradition of politicized music which highlighted
social inequality, police violence and racism. While a number of these
seminal musicians continue to perform, we ask authors to consider how
the next generation of musicians has taken the baton from their
predecessors. Presentations are not limited to research on rap and hip
hop (these are used as examples), but are open to research on all
contemporary musical forms utilized in the service of social change.
In the final session, participants will attempt to draw up a working set
of questions and propositions that, in light of the day’s discussions,
they believe protest movements needs to address. The aim is to
underscore what communications and media studies can bring to the
discussion on the politics of protest.
Please join us to share your insights and expertise.
How to Participate
*** Submit an Abstract to Present Your Work during the Preconference
Deadline: 25 January 2014
Notification of Acceptance: February 5, 2014
PLEASE INDICATE WHICH OF THE THREE SESSIONS YOU ARE SUBMITTING TO!!!
We invite five minute presentations are based on abstract submissions
(250 words). Again, applicants are asked to specify which of the three
sessions they are submitting to. If accepted, the participants will be
asked to circulate short position papers prior to the preconference
(deadline 30 April, 2014). While the preconference is designed to be of
interest primarily to media and communications researchers, due to the
highly interdisciplinary nature of its topic we invite submissions from
neighboring disciplines as well as from activist networks and the
creative industry. We will particularly encourage creative and
experimental formats.
Potential topics include but are not limited to:
-Racial/ethnic/gendered/sexual identities in protest movements
-Cultural politics in the neoliberal era
-Representation post 9/11
-The media and social justice
-Popular culture and resistance
-Media studies, anti-racist politics and intersectionality
-Representing protest
-New media activism
-Social movements and media strategies
-The politics of representation/recognition/redistribution
-Mediated forms of solidarity and commonality
-Contesting 'neoliberalism'
Please include the following information in your submission:
- Title of presentation
- Name(s), affiliation(s), and email address(es) of author(s)
- On co-authored submissions, the name, affiliation, and email address
of the author who will be presenting the work at the Preconference
- A 1 page (250 words excluding notes and references) abstract in 12 pt.
Times New Roman in Word doc/docx format
- For each author, a 100-word-maximum description of the author’s
area(s) of research interest related to the digital divide in 12 pt.
Times New Roman in a separate Word doc/docx format file
Please email your submission to the ERIC Chair Miyase Christensen and to
Preconference Co-conveners Patrick Murphy (Popular Communication, Temple
University) and Anamik Saha (ERIC, Goldsmiths, University of London).
E-mails: (miyase.christensen /at/ ims.su.se); (murphy.p /at/ temple.edu);
(a.saha /at/ leeds.ac.uk).
PLEASE MAKE SURE YOU SEND YOUR SUBMISSION TO MIYASE; PATRICK AND ANAMIK
SIMULTANEOUSLY!
If you would like to just attend the Preconference to join in the
dialogue without any other involvement, please email the Preconference
Organizer, Miyase Christensen, (miyase.christensen /at/ ims.su.se), to indicate
your intention so that we can include you in all emails of Preconference
announcements.
Please contact Miyase Christensen, (miyase.christensen /at/ ims.su.se), for any
other questions or further information.
About ERIC --
The Ethnicity and Race in Communication Division is concerned with
methodological approaches and research that apply, extend or develop
communication theory and analysis through an examination of race and
ethnicity within local, international and transnational contexts.
The division also works to advocate for the improved status,
representation and opportunities for underrepresented scholars in
communication.
About Popular Communication –
Popular Communication is concerned with providing a forum for scholarly
investigation, analysis, and dialogue among communication researchers
interested in a wide variety of communication symbols, forms, phenomena
and strategic systems of symbols within the context of contemporary
popular culture.
Division members encourage and employ a variety of empirical and
critical methodologies with application to diverse human communication
acts, processes, products and artifacts which have informational,
entertainment, or suasory potential or effect among mass audiences.
About the International Communication Association (ICA) --
ICA is an academic association for scholars interested in the study,
teaching, and application of all aspects of human and mediated
communication and is a truly international association with more than
4,800 members in 77 countries. Since 2003, ICA has been officially
associated with the United Nations as a non-governmental association (NGO).
Further information about ICA is available at http://www.icahdq.org/ and
complete details about ICA's 64th Annual Conference in Seattle, 22-26
May 2014, are available at http://www.icahdq.org/conf/index.asp.
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