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[ecrea] CFP: One Planet -- One Humanity
Wed Jan 01 14:05:05 GMT 2014
“One Planet – One Humanity: Communications For and Against”
An International, Interdisciplinary, Research-Planning Conference
Benedictine University, May 29-31, 2014
CALL FOR PAPERS
Deadline: January 20, 2014
We are seeking proposals by academicians from the sciences, social
sciences, media studies, and the humanities who are interested in
participating in the conference and in developing papers on the
conference theme.
Please send resume and 600-word abstract to Luigi Manca and Jean-Marie
Kauth, conference coordinators ((lmanca /at/ ben.edu); (jkauth /at/ ben.edu)). Each
proposal will be reviewed by a panel composed of members of the
conference organizing committee. The committee includes members from a
variety of disciplines.
The purpose of this research-planning conference is to bring together
scholars from different disciplines who are interested in discussing the
emergence of an interconnected humanity in an interconnected world and
the role of the mass media of communication in this process.
Today’s media are failing humanity. The interconnected spiritual reality
of humans has been contaminated by a pervasive, irresponsible, and
dysfunctional use at the global level of the mass media of
communication. Rather than providing pictures of reality on which the
world’s citizens can act, the corporate-controlled media are widely used
as instruments of commercial and political propaganda, creating an
immense web of images and narratives that their creators know to be not
true – fabrications designed to sell, to manipulate, and in a sense, to
enslave worldwide audiences. Under these conditions, it is not possible
for the human race to achieve any true awareness of itself and of its
habitat, and to develop an adequate orientation about the issues
confronting the world today.
And the systematic destruction of our future goes on.
This conference is about the media and about liberation from the
dominant images and narratives of consumer society.
At the core of this discussion is a rather simple utopian vision of one
planet for a unified humanity – billions of people whose destinies and
dreams are interconnected and interdependent, and who share the same
planet. One planet – one humanity. It is a vision of a world not divided
into separate countries or separate ethnic or religious communities all
competing or even going to war against one another over the exploitation
of the available resources. It is a vision of a world in which we all
share responsibly for the common human habitat. From this point of view,
issues such as global warming, world-wide pollution, and the systematic
destruction of the environment are immediately connected to human rights
issues because these issues impact our ability to fulfill our needs and
dreams in the one living planet we all share, and because our own
survival as a species may very well be at stake here.
If we look at the media from the point of view of this utopian vision we
must first realize that the media industry is not controlled by the
people but by the corporations. Corporate interests exercise a monopoly
control over the media and, through them, over the images and narratives
that reach worldwide audiences. We must also realize that the interests
of the corporate structure that controls the available resources and
that pollutes the human physical and cultural habitat are on a collision
course with the interests of this one, interconnected humanity. These
corporate interests are not necessarily unified by a single agenda. In
fact, multi-national corporations compete against one another in a
continued struggle for control of markets, resources, political
influence, and profits. What does unify these corporate interests is the
need to continue to support and expand a consumer economy that is based
on the exploitation of people and resources, the eventual destruction of
the environment, and the contamination of public discourse.
Still, we don’t see the media necessarily as the enemy. Instead, we see
the multinational corporations who control the media and compete to
advance their profits and influence as the enemy. In fact, if freed from
the corporate control, the media can help us change the world. For the
first time in human history, we now have the kinds of media of
communication that could potentially connect all the people in the
planet with one another and with the huge body of accumulated knowledge,
art, and culture. As the extensions of humans, the media can be
instruments of salvation instead of destruction, liberation instead of
oppression.
The conference will run for three days and will consist of one on-going
plenary session in which each participant presents his or her ideas,
after which we all engage in general discussion. While we don’t want to
have separate simultaneous sessions, we can have some breaks long enough
for people to get together in smaller groups to discuss whatever they want.
We intend to limit the total number of people attending the conference
to 25.
One intended outcome of the conference is the compilation of a book
provisionally entitled One Planet – One Humanity: Communications For and
Against. The book will consist of a peer-reviewed selection of some of
the essays developed through the conference.
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