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[ecrea] CFP: Social Media, Discourse and Culture
Wed Jul 02 15:40:50 GMT 2014
The /Journal of Multicultural Discourses/ is playing an important role
in promoting the role of culture in discourse studies. Different
cultural communities interact differently, in terms of worldviews,
concepts, values, rules, strategies, means, channels, purposes and
consequences. And in and between all these communities there are
inequalities and power relations that discourse researchers can and
should reveal. Yet at the same time we live in a world dominated by
some key kinds of power relations, specifically with the continued
dominance and global spread of American-Western free-market capitalism
and media formats and styles. What may not be so important is how and
if people are different, but the power relations they inhabit are.
For this special edition of /Journal of Multicultural Discourses
/authors are invited to submit abstracts that offer new insights into
how social media can reveal, foster, facilitate or suppress, culturally
specific kinds of communication, identity expression, forms of social
relations, intercultural understandings and discourses. In social media
such as Facebook or Twitter who speaks and how, what social position is
taken, what is said and not said? And importantly in the case of social
media how does this evolve over interactions and what kinds of
engagement between users take place? What kinds of cultural norms,
patterns, relations, rules and values are revealed and through what
kinds of discourses, genres and modes?
Papers are welcome from across disciplines and methods that deal with
discourse and communication, though it is preferred that there is close
linguistic, multimodal or semiotic analysis. At the same time, papers
that use ethnography, or political economic approaches are welcome, too.
Topics can be as broad as those found on social media. Studies can be
of the smaller details of conversation but also those that point to
broader changes and patterns in use and participation, issues of
resistance, off-line/ on-line relations, community management, patterns
in uses of platforms and language style itself.
Please send abstracts (300-450 words) directly to the guest editor Gwen
Bouvier (gwen.bouvier /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(gwen.bouvier /at/ gmail.com)>.
Deadline: 5/08/2014.
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