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[ecrea] PARGC 2014 Symposium - The Revolutionary Public Sphere: Contention, Communication and Culture in the Arab Uprisings
Wed Mar 12 00:55:38 GMT 2014
The Project for Advanced Research in Global Communication
is proud to present
the Inaugural PARGC Symposium
The Revolutionary Public Sphere
Contention, Communication and Culture in the Arab Uprisings
Thursday, April 10, 2014
Annenberg School for Communication
View full program here: http://bit.ly/1dY4J9L
The popular rebellions that have swept Arab countries since December
2010 have spawned an active field of insurrectionary cultural
production. Scholars from around the world will gather at the Annenberg
School for PARGC’s inaugural symposium. Putting primary sources in
dialogue with theory, we seek to understand aesthetic experimentation
and stylistic innovation in this revolutionary public sphere. Together,
we will strive to shed light on the ways in which various revolutionary
and counter-revolutionary activists and regimes have attracted, upheld,
and directed popular attention to themselves and to their opponents. Our
exploration of contention, communication and culture in the Arab
uprisings will yield conceptual tools to understand revolutionary public
spheres at large.
Speakers & Topics:
Yakein Abdelmagid (Duke University): Independent music production in Cairo
Omar Al-Ghazzi (University of Pennsylvania): The symbol of Omar
al-Mukhtar in the Libyan uprising
Anahi Alviso-Marino (Université Paris-1 Panthéon-Sorbonne): Contentious
politics and street art in Yemen
Walter Armbrust (University of Oxford): Egypt’s June 30th rebellion as
social drama
Donatella Della Ratta (University of Pennsylvania): Syrian internet
memes and the politics of cultural (re)production
Tarek El-Ariss (University of Texas, Austin): Literary writing and
violence in the Arab Spring
Nouri Gana (University of California, Los Angeles): Rap music in the
Tunisian revolution
Nour Halabi (University of Pennsylvania): Hezbollah logos and
carnivalesque humor in revolutionary times
Adel Iskandar (Georgetown University): The politics of memes in
revolutionary Egypt
Marc Owen Jones (University of Durham): Satire and social media in the
Bahrain uprising
Amal Khalaf (Serpentine Galleries): The Pearl Roundabout and public
space in Bahrain
Shayna Silverstein (University of Pennsylvania): Syrian revolutionary
music and the politics of memory
Jakob Skovgaard-Petersen (University of Copenhagen): Revolutionary and
Islamic content in Ramadan musalsalat (long TV drama)
Leila Tayeb (Northwestern University): Utopian impulses in Libyan
revolutionary performances
Edward Ziter (New York University): The anecdotal in Syrian oppositional
theatre
Contact:
Marina Krikorian
Project Coordinator
Project for Advanced Research in Global Communication
The Annenberg School for Communication, University of Pennsylvania
(mkrikorian /at/ asc.upenn.edu)
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