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[ecrea] 17th DiscourseNet conference on Reflexivity and Critique in Discourse
Tue Oct 06 19:23:37 GMT 2015
INTRODUCTORY NOTE
The 17th DN conference on reflexivity and critique offers a venue for
exploring the different ways in which reflexivity and critique can be
deployed in order to shape (our understandings of) selves, discourses
and societies in meaningful ways. To this end, this conference hopes to
bring together researchers interested in (a) the role of reflexivity and
critique in the study of discourse and/or in (b) the role of reflexivity
and critique play in the social realities we investigate. Prof. Jan
Blommaert, Prof. Johannes Angermuller, Prof. Marianne Winther-Jörgensen
and Prof. Ramon Reichert will act as keynote speakers. More information
can be found at: http://dn17.discourseanalysis.net .
CFP
The use of language and other multimodal and symbolic systems of
discourse requires some degree of reflexive awareness. This reflexive
awareness allows us to criticize our own discourses as well as the
discourses of others. Without it, scientific, cultural and political
debate could not take place. In some ways, all language users perform
critical and less critical modes of discourse analysis on a daily basis.
We would not be able to imagine alternative worlds if we were unable to
make use of the reflexive potential of our systems of communication.
Reflexivity and critique take many forms and perform many functions. It
is this multiplicity that we seek to address during this conference.
Below you may find a non-exclusive list of potential topics for papers.
We welcome both theoretical and empirical contributions.
Theorizing reflexivity and critique (Discussions of semiotic,
linguistic, pragmatist, hermeneutic, and/or poststructuralist approaches
to reflexivity and critique. Linguistic, ethnographic, historical,
sociological, psychological and philosophical insights into discourse,
critique, and reflexivity may all be relevant)
Investigating reflexivity and critique in discourse studies
(Methodological issues in analyzing reflexivity and critique in
discourse studies. Issues related to the scope and the limitations of
quantitative, qualitative, mixed, and alternative methods for
investigating reflexivity and critique in discourse studies may be
addressed)
Epistemological issues in reflexivity and critique in discourse studies
(Researchers may address epistemological issues about internal
conversations, narrative thinking, social realism, radical
constructivism etc.)
Cognitive and affective markers of reflexivity and critique (E.g.: the
role of mental models, beliefs, and expectations in the discursive
analysis of reflexivity and critique; the role of affectómoods,
emotions, and sentimentsóin the discursive constitution of reflexivity
and critique)
Reflexivity and critique in identity discourse (papers may address:
personal narratives and reflexive deliberations; reflexivity and
critique in the discursive reproduction of self, habitus or
subjectivity; reflexivity and critique in multimodal constructions of
identity)
Reflexivity and critique in literary and artistic discourse (Critique
can take many forms. It may function as irony, satire, and humor in a
variety of artistic genres such as literature, graphic, performative
and/or audio-visual art-forms and media.
Reflexivity and critique in academic discourse (e.g.: how do reflexivity
and critique as articulated in the academic domain relate to other
spaces and practices of the public realm; to what extent do reflexivity
and critique play a role in academic professional identities)
Reflexivity and critique in journalistic discourse (e.g.: personal and
institutional constructions of reflexivity and critique in journalistic
practices;)
Reflexivity and critique in political discourse (e.g.: discursive
framing of reflexivity and critique in political identity; reflexivity
and critique in political activism and social movements;)
Reflexivity, critique, and discourse in a technological age (e.g. how
are critique and reflexivity articulated in (mobile) social media)
Hegemony, reflexivity and critique (How can we think reflexivity in
relation to hegemony and critique; Are there forms of power conducive to
the articulation of (self-)critique and what do these look like?)
Discourse plays a powerful role in shaping who and what we are. It
modulates and constitutes the subjective ways in which we imagine and
act upon the world, each other and ourselves. Discourse ñ in its
linguistic, textual and multimodal manifestations, as well as in the
more abstract sense of the word ñ shapes our subjectively experienced
reality. At the same time, discourse is no monolith that determines
every aspect of agency in a predictable and/or law-like fashion. Human
beings have a capacity to become aware of at least some of the
dimensions of the discursive practices and processes they are involved in.
The human capacity for textual, artistic, literary, social and political
(self-) critique would be unimaginable without our capacity to use
discourse reflexively. We can use linguistic and non-linguistic symbolic
resources in order to bend discourse back onto itself and in order to
imagine alternative stories, explanations and futures for the realities
we live in. This is not to say that we exert conscious control over all
of the discursive processes that allow for a meaningful experience of
reality at all times. Much of these processes remain part of the
ideological and/or hegemonic backgrounds of everyday life.
The 17th DiscourseNet conference on Critique and reflexivity in
discourse will be organised at the University of Navarra in Pamplona
(UNAV), Spain between March 16th 2016 to March 18th, 2016. Please
register and send in your abstracts before October 31st 2015. Acceptance
of your paper will be communicated around November 30th. We welcome both
English and Spanish contributions to this event, but it is very likely
that the lingua franca will be English rather than Spanish. Also, the
keynote lectures will be presented in English.
Upon acceptance, a fee will have to be payed in order to complete the
registration process. The fee will be 75 euros for people with an
institutional affiliation and 50 euros for people without it. If you
have any questions, you may reach the organization at (dn17 /at/ unav.es) .
Registration happens through the DiscourseNet website via:
http://dn17.discourseanalysis.net .
Note that after the 17th DiscourseNet conference, the 2nd DiscourseNet
Spring School on the Critical usage of quantitative, qualititative and
mixed methods software for discourse studies will also take place at
UNAV. This Spring school takes place from March 21st to March 24th in
the year 2016.
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