[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[ecrea] CFP: Protest Participation in Variable Communication Ecologies: Meanings, Modalities and Implications
Sun Feb 01 11:49:28 GMT 2015
Many thanks to everyone who has submitted an abstract to our upcoming
ICS Symposium ‘Protest Participation in Variable Communication
Ecologies: Meanings, Modalities and Implications’. This is a quick note
to say that we have extended the submission deadline to 15 February 2015.
Please see our Call for Papers below for further details.
Apologies for cross-posting.
Best regards,
Dan
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Protest Participation in Variable Communication Ecologies: Meanings,
Modalities and Implications
http://protestcommunicationecologies.com/
A Three-Day International Symposium to be held in Alghero (Sardinia, Italy)
24-26 June 2015
Contemporary collective action, social movements, civic and political
protests are characterized by a growing complexity of actors, contents,
repertories, contexts, and effects. Grappling with the implications of
late modernity, scholars worldwide have reflected on the
cross-fertilization of individual practices and collective
mobilizations. They have foregrounded unconventional forms of
engagement, through reflexive, expressive and embodied acts of dissent
cutting across the cultural, political, and social domains, in
persistent as well as increasingly transient modes of organisation and
belonging. Within this field, some accounts graft social media as an
independent variable that would mitigate the democratic deficits of
mass-mediated and institutionalised politics. Others would warn of the
power imbalances and the inequalities in participation particularly
social media reinforce or heighten.
Keynote speakers
Lance Bennett (University of Washington, USA)
Natalie Fenton (Goldsmith College, University of London, UK)
Zizi Papacharissi (University of Illinois at Chicago, USA)
Bev Skeggs (Goldsmith College, University of London, UK)
Seeking to kindle an imagination that situates social media in lived
experience and practice, this conference intends to unpick the history
and the present of linkages but also of any signs of a conscious
uncoupling of network technologies, broadcasting media and physical
places where protest participation is enacted. In doing so, we aim to
tackle the significant challenges posed to democratic politics, social
theory and research by resultant variable communication ecologies.
The organizers call for theoretical reflections and empirical analyses
tracking continuities and changes in protest participation arising in
the blurred lines between social media, broadcasting media and physical
places. In particular, the conference welcomes contributions that
address the following questions:
What forms of civic/uncivic protest participation are (de)activated in
contemporary communication ecologies?
What are the effects of these different forms of participation on
institutional politics, political culture, civic education, collective
identities and the media?
Which structural – both societal and technological – elements of
contemporary communication ecologies enable, accentuate or discourage
protest participation?
Which type of content converges and is hybridized in the practices of
protest participants, of protest-covering media or of the organizations
that are targets of protest?
Which forms of exclusion are being overcome or heightened in the
communication ecologies where protest participation is instantiated?
What are the conceptual challenges ahead of us? As we query
communication ecologies, do concepts old and new, e.g. “mediatization”,
“convergence”, “remediation”, “boundary publics”, “connective action”
continue to be analytically informing for mapping the nature and meaning
of participation in protest as well as in the civic life beyond it?
Which methodological obstacles arise for research oriented towards
analysing protest participation in variable communication ecologies? And
how do we overcome them?
We invite 500 word abstracts that outline the envisaged potential to
tackle such questions in innovative ways. Abstracts should be
accompanied by a 100-word biography of the presenter(s) together with
contact details. Abstracts/biographies/contact details should be sent to
(protest_ecologies /at/ uniss.it).
Proposals will be reviewed on a rolling basis by the scientific
committee. The final deadline for submission is 30th January 2015.
Without compromising scientific standards, the Conference aims for a
wide geographical representation of scientists. Notifications of
acceptance will be sent out at the earliest opportunity and no later
than March 2015.
Following the conference, participants will be invited to submit their
papers for consideration by the journal iCS – Information, Communication
& Society which will dedicate a special issue to the conference
proceedings. At that time, contributions will also be invited for an
edited collection.
---------------
ECREA-Mailing list
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier and ECREA.
--
To subscribe, post or unsubscribe, please visit
http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
URL: http://homepages.vub.ac.be/~ncarpent/
--
ECREA - European Communication Research and Education Association
Chauss�de Waterloo 1151, 1180 Uccle, Belgium
Email: (info /at/ ecrea.eu)
URL: http://www.ecrea.eu
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]