Archive for calls, December 2014

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[ecrea] Global Humanitarianism and Media Culture Conference

Fri Dec 05 06:38:02 GMT 2014




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Registration for the Global Humanitarianism and Media Culture conference is now open:http://ghmcconference.com/registration

Thanks to the University of Sussex Researcher-Led Initiative Fund, we can now offer 10 fee waivers to PhD students wishing to attend the conference. Please register your interest via email:(ghmc.conference /at/ sussex.ac.uk)

Registration deadline: Friday 16th January 2015

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Global Humanitarianism and Media Culture
Conference to be held at the University of Sussex, Brighton, UK, 6-8 February 2015
Supported by the School of Media, Film and Music and the Sussex Centre for the Visual
Supported by the Doctoral School's Researcher-Led Initiative Fund

Keynote speakers:

Professor Lilie Chouliaraki (London School of Economics)
Author of The Ironic Spectator: Solidarity in the Age of Post-humanitarianism (2012) and The Spectatorship of Suffering (2006)

Professor Suzanne Franks (City University London)
Author of Reporting Disasters – Famine, Aid, Politics and the Media (2013)

Dr. Shohini Chaudhuri (University of Essex)
Author of Cinema of the Dark Side: Atrocity and the Ethics of Film Spectatorship (2014)

PLUS: a special screening of the previously banned Save the Children Fund Film (Ken Loach, 1971)
[with Juliano Fiori, Senior Humanitarian Affairs Adviser, Save the Children]

This conference intends to bring together scholars and students working across a range of disciplines to consider the relationships between global humanitarianism and media culture from a variety of critical and theoretical perspectives. As Keith Tester has argued, modern humanitarianism and the institutions and technologies of media culture are inextricably entwined. In recent decades various scholars have analysed the relationship between media representations and moral sentiments, from the emergence of “humanitarian narratives” in the eighteenth century (Thomas Laqueur) to the “humanitarian optics” of today (Eyal Weizman). This conference seeks to contribute to our understanding of the histories and futures of global humanitarianism by focusing attention on diverse intersections between media technologies and what Didier Fassin has called “the politics of precarious lives.”

Provisional programme:http://ghmcconference.com/programme

Like us on Facebook for updates about the conference:https://www.facebook.com/ghmcconference

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