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[ecrea] conference: Discourses on and of Europe Debates and controversies
Tue Dec 09 01:17:55 GMT 2014
status: CfP Call for papers
conference
Discourses on and of Europe Debates and controversies
17.12.2015-18.12.2015
Université libre de Bruxelles
European integration goes back over 62 years including the European Coal
and Steel Community. For a long time it remained closed to popular
concern, and was mainly a matter for the political class and a few
professions directly affected such as civil servants, financial and
industrial elites and exporters, and specialist lawyers. Everything
changed when the political and economic elites decided to transform the
common market, with its famous common agricultural policy, into an
Economic and Monetary Union. This project and the adoption of a single
currency made it necessary to change public attitudes and therefore to
undertake an exceptionally far-reaching communication policy to convince
as many people as possible of the benefits. Even before the signature of
the Maastricht Treaty by heads of state and government in December 1991,
Europe lost its public -anonymity', as new arguments and terminologies
arose within public debates and fundamentally different positions were take
n up arou
nd the meaning and direction of integration: neoliberalism versus
social socially redistributive policies; national sovereignty versus
supranationalism; a Europe of states versus a Europe of regions; and
left versus right. A strong bipolarisation of attitudes emerged in the
construction of straightforward choices for or against European
integration either as a principle, or in the form it had taken since the
Single Market of 1985. Even among advocates of European integration,
debates have been intense: widening versus deepening; federalism versus
confederalism; supranational versus intergovernmental; singlespeed
versus multi-speed Europe. These debates are older but have become more
urgent as integration has developed. Since 2010, the post-Lisbon shift
towards new economic governance structures and policies has accentuated
the contested nature of European power, symbolised for example by the
highly controversial troika, as economic and social cleavages have
hardened: rich v
ersus poo
r, banks versus the people.
The conference will gather together academics from these disciplines in
order to explore, whether synchronically or diachronically, the
discourses of actors whose positions on European integration diverge and
conflict. These controversies and antagonistic positions help us to
understand the real nature of European nature. Which types of
conflictual discourse endure, which fade away or become superceded?
Which appear across countries and which are nation-specific? Which
develop through mutual confrontation and may even be enriched by it?
Which conflicts are particularly salient today? Which themes, styles,
arguments, symbols and artefacts are most commonly used? Which actors
and which social groups use which arguments? Who supports European
integration, who rejects it? Who supports Europe, who rejects it ?
We will also be invited to ask ourself what is the role of the mass
medias discourses in the construction of problems related to Europe
(i.e. Integration of Turkey) and also in the mediatization of the
debates, presented as controversies.
Conversely, how are pro-integrationist discourses mobilised by political
actors in order to create consensus around European policy-making? How
and why are -alibi' or -external constraint' discourses developed by
national political actors in relation to the EU? How are discourses of
economic rationality and -responsibility' presented? How are discourses
of European integration presented in the context of economic
globalisation? How does political and economic policy discourse relate
the national and European levels of policy? How are political and
economic discourses on Europe produced as ways of defining the sphere of
political controversy and contestation, and demarcating it from the
sphere of consensus?
As well as political and media discourse, the conference will also look
at -profane' public spaces for contestation and debate such as
discussion forums and social media. Civic discussion and deliberation,
both formal (through surveys, online consultations) and informal and
dispersed (such as through Facebook or blogs), will become more
important as the EU purposively develops its own consultative and
participatory tools and mechanisms. But civic voices may also become
more contestatory, through the use of petitions or citizen initiatives.
Polemical discourses may thus be seen as a means of democratisation.
Papers are invited from a wide range of perspectives, including
discourse analysis in its multiple forms and methods, and political
science approaches to understanding actors, institutions and policies,
and not excluding other disciplinary approaches. The common focus will
be the production of discourses on Europe whether in its present or past
forms, and without any preconceived ideas about the type of discourse or
corpus of text. As Europe is a multilingual space (the EU recognises no
less than 24 official languages), papers on multilingual corpuses will
be particularly welcome.
Contact person: Corinne Gobin
email: (cogobin /at/ ulb.ac.be)
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