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[ecrea] CfP: Mediatized Cultural Activism
Wed Jun 25 21:20:20 GMT 2014
Conjunctions: Transdisciplinary Journal of Cultural Participation
Call for papers: Mediatized Cultural Activism
Deadline: Papers must be submitted by November 15, 2014.
In recent years participatory and activist practises in the public space
have been increasingly entangled with digital networks. This is evident
in large-scale protests such as the Occupy Wall Street movement, the
various activist practices related to the so-called Arab Spring, the
Taksim Gezi Park protests, and in activists groups such as Femen, Pussy
Riot, and Anonymous. Furthermore a proliferation of quasi-autonomous
recognition networks of creative knowledge workers (Lievrouw 2011) has
occurred and the boundaries between commodity culture and social
resistance are increasingly blurred (Mukherjee and Banet-Weiser 2012).
The common denominator for these highly diverse forms of protests seems
to be that the revolting subjects (Tyler 2013), who may or may not
invest their bodies in public spaces, rely on the documentation and
circulation of their protests. In that sense activists’ practises are
increasingly modelled in order to accommodate media circulation.
Activists’ practises become mediatized (Hjarvard 2008; Hepp 2012) and
the activist imaginary (Marcus 1996) emerges in the intersection of
online and offline activities. Yet despite the mediatization and media
circulation there is no guarantee that the protests will have lasting
impact. The question thus become how the transition from mediatized
activism to policymaking can occur and how we move from the
technological ability to communicate to lasting connections (Zuckerman
2013).
It is from such perspective that we invite papers that ask what digital
and networked culture, technological apparatus, mediatization, and
database logic do for the ways in which people participate in and
construe activism. How does digitalization and mediatization change the
ways in which participants invest themselves and their bodies in
activist protests? What role do local networks play? And how do
authorities cope when they not only have to control activist practices
in the local space, but also in the media? Thus we seek papers that
investigate how digital networks redesigns the modalities of activist
participation, ask how we can understand the relation between visual
culture and activist practises, investigates the institutional limits
and opportunities of activism, ask who have stakes in cultural
resistance, and investigate the possibility for cultural dissent to
emerge as political resistance.
Camilla Møhring Reestorff
Editor in Chief, Conjunctions – Transdisciplinary Journal of Cultural
Participation
http://www.conjunctions-tjcp.com/
PhD, assistant professor
Department of Aesthetics and Communication
Aarhus University
Jens Chr. Skous Vej 2, 1485/536
8000 Århus C - Denmark
Tlf: (+45) 871 63181 / (+45) 22783252
Email: (norcmr /at/ dac.au.dk)
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