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[ecrea] CFP: Conflict and crisis in elite sport
Fri Jan 31 01:56:18 GMT 2014
CALL FOR ARTICLES
Special issue of the Catalan Journal of Communication and Cultural
Studies 6.2
Conflict and crisis in elite sport: media, ideology, identity and
politics in an era of hyper-sportisation
EXTENDED DEADLINE: 28 February 2014
Guest editors: Verner Møller (Department of Sports Sciences, University
of Aarhus) and Bernat López (Department of Communication Studies,
Universitat Rovira i Virgili).
Professional elite sport and the closely related phenomenon of media and
spectator sport are among the most global, pervasive, influential, and
visible social phenomena across countries, cultures, and social strata.
Modern societies seem to be clearly demanding more sport, not less
(Dimeo, 2007: 138). The sportisation process (Maguire, 2007) seems to be
entering a new era in which more is at stake concerning elite and
spectator sports: nationalism, identity, geopolitics, the leisure
economy, corporate capitalism, and the continuous (re)definition of the
boundaries of human performance and capabilities. Despite commercial
sport being increasingly an object of attention for social theory and
social research, their expanded relevance calls for further and closer
scrutiny. This proposed special issue intends to contribute to this.
Although a wide range of commodities and infrastructures, from tennis
balls to stadia, are closely associated with elite sport, its basic
"product" has no materiality in and of itself since it is a performance:
essentially a mass-mediated performance. Sport is a cultural and
symbolic phenomenon. As such it offers an ideal site for the expression
of ideology, identity (re)construction and cultural and political
struggle. Therefore this special issue will focus on modern elite sport
as the arena for symbolic and ideological conflict, struggle and crisis.
Contributions are invited from any social scientific and cultural
studies perspective, such as sociology, psychology, anthropology,
philosophy, media and communication studies, sports studies, gender
studies, economics, law, history, and political science.
Proposals are expected to focus on the relationship between elite and
media sports and a wide range of issues: national, class, gender,
sexual, intergenerational or racial struggle, the doping debate,
symbolic violence, identity (re)construction, global versus local, the
survival of small national cultures in the new global context, etc.
Articles applying a stateless-nation or small nation-state perspective
will be particularly welcome.
The journal plans to include articles of around 6-7.000 words, plus
short research reports of around 3.000 words for the Viewpoint section.
Full articles for proposed contributions should be sent to
(catalan.journal /at/ urv.cat) <mailto:(catalan.journal /at/ urv.cat)> by 28 FEBRUARY
2014. Acceptance of articles will be confirmed by 30 April 2014. All
contributions will be subjected to anonymous peer review. For more
details about the journal guidelines please visit:
http://catalanjournal.wordpress.com/
Guest editors:
Professor Verner Møller is one of the leading scholars in the field of
doping and sport studies. He is co-founder of the International Network
of Humanistic Doping Research (INHDR) (http://www.doping.au.dk), which
brings together 30 researchers from twelve different countries devoted
to the study of the philosophical, social, and cultural aspects of
doping and anti-doping. Professor Møller has published extensively on
the issue, in Danish and English. His main contributions include the
monographs The ethics of doping and anti-doping: Redeeming the soul of
sport? (Routledge, 2010), Dopingdjævlen -- analyse af en hed debat
(Gyldendal, 1999; English version: The Doping Devil), Doping and Public
Policy (co-editor, University Press of Southern Denmark, 2004), Elite
sport, doping and public health (co-editor, University of Southern
Denmark Press, 2009), and Doping and anti-doping policy in sport:
ethical and legal perspectives (Routledge, 2011).
Bernat López has recently moved into the field of sport and doping
studies where he has published on the social history of cycling in Spain
and Catalonia, and already contributed recognised insights into the
social construction of the doping issue. His previous research
activities dealt mainly with minority cultures, media, and communication
and cultural policies in Catalonia. He is the author of, among other,
"Sport, Media, Politics and Nationalism on the Eve of the Spanish Civil
War: The First Vuelta Ciclista a España (1935)" (International Journal
of the History of Sport 27, 4, 2010), "Doping as Technology: A Rereading
of the History of Performance-Enhancing Substance Use" (International
Journal of Sport Policy and Politics 4, 1, 2012) and "The invention of a
'drug of mass destruction': deconstructing the EPO myth" (Sport in
History 31,1, 2011).
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