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[ecrea] CFP: Media, War and Memory
Mon Jun 30 17:01:32 GMT 2014
deadline extended to July 30
AUT University (Auckland, New Zealand) - Journalism, Media and
Democracy (JMAD)
Conference Call for Papers:
Media, War and Memory
September 18–19, 2014
Venue: Sir Paul Reeves Building
Keynote Speakers: Andrew Hoskins, University of Glasgow and Fay
Anderson, Monash University
A century after 1914, it is timely to consider how World War I was
started, prosecuted and reported on, from different national
perspectives. How does this conflict appear in retrospect? As a prequel
to World War II? The ‘beginning’ of the 20th century? Or as an
avoidable, stand-alone catastrophe? These questions provoke wider
reflection upon the connections between media, war and memory. What are
these connections? How have they changed over time? Conference
participants will, we hope, respond to these questions.
To this end, the following themes suggest themselves.
World War I
• Paths to war, patterns of news coverage
• Diplomacy, communication and the telegraph
• Atrocities and propaganda
• Frontline testimonials, journalism, poetry
• Domestic dissent
Race, culture, genocide
• Imperialism, colonialism, indigineity
• Jewish holocaust
• Armenian massacres
• Testimonies, amnesia Gender and depictions of war
• Masculinity, heroism
• War and patriarchy
• War, rape, testimony
• Women war journalists
• Women combatants
Journalism, media, civil conflict
• Spanish civil war
• Sri Lanka
• Balkans, Bosnia, Serbia
• US civil war
• Occupation, resistance, testimony
War, historiography and revisionism
• War novels
• Non-fiction tomes, wars, battles
• Military biographies
• Documentaries
• Conflicting retrospectives of major conflicts
Australia and NZ coverage of ‘overseas’ conflicts
• Boer War, WWI, WWII • Cold war conflicts; Malaysia, Vietnam, Timor,
Kuwait, Iraq,
Afghanistan etc. • ANZAC mythologies • Wartime censorship • War,
mobilization and dissent
War, propaganda, ideology
• Chomsky, Herman and the ‘propaganda’ model • News ‘framing’ and war
coverage • Orientalism and colonial wars • War and national identity
• Memorialism; ceremonies, monuments, museums • Forgotten wars
Frontline war reporting
• War correspondents • ‘Embedded’ journalists • Journalistic ethics •
Patriotism and ‘independent’ reporting
Information-communication technologies and war
• Global television, 24/7 ‘real time’ wars • War and media spectacle •
Media space, battle space, ‘full spectrum dominance’ • Information and
cyber warfare • Online journalism, blogospheres, social media
Media constructions of ‘terrorism’
• Legitimate vs. illegitimate violence • Terrorists, revolutionaries,
freedom fighters • Post 9-11 media discourses in US, Middle East •
Terrorism and orientalism
Abstracts due: July 30, 2014 (400 words maximum)
Send to: (jmad /at/ aut.ac.nz); (wayne.hope /at/ aut.ac.nz); (verica.rupar /at/ aut.ac.nz)
Verica Rupar
Associate Professor
Curriculum Leader, Journalism
School of Communication Studies
AUT University
Private Bag 92006
Auckland 1142
New Zealand
Phone: ++64 9 9219999/ext 6407
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