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[ecrea] CFP: Tutu Centre Conference on "Representing Peace and Conflict"
Sat Dec 19 11:22:47 GMT 2015
Archbishop Desmond Tutu Centre for War and Peace Studies
Annual Conference 2015
13 - 15 July 2016
“Representing Peace and Conflict”
KEYNOTE: TBC
CALL FOR PAPERS
Representing plays a key role in contexts of peace and conflict.
Representing may determine how peace and conflict are created,
understood, remembered and encountered. Peace and conflict dynamics can
be seen as facilitated or mitigated as a consequence of representation.
Several aspects of representing are important: How peace and conflict is
represented through the media as well as statements by public officials
and other social forces is crucial for public opinion formation. How
peace and conflict is represented through literary texts and other
artistic forms is equally significant for public understanding and
remembrance. The potential of representing is indeed manifold, ranging
from the construction of news media and film representations, statements
by official spokespersons and public bodies to literary accounts of
peace and conflict as well as representations in artworks and
exhibitions. Together, these aspects of representing impact on public
knowledge, understanding and political participation.
This conference aims to examine the diverse contexts of representing in
relation to peace and conflict. A key theme will be the examination of
the role of representing in terms of how conflict and peace are
discussed, negotiated, formed, understood and remembered.
This will involve experts from a range of fields, and we welcome
contributions from researchers and practitioners in the areas of
International Relations, Media and Communication, Film Studies, Drama
and Theatre, History, Literature, Journalism, Sociology, Anthropology,
Art History and Peace Studies. Equally we would like to include experts
whose primary fields might be in other disciplines. The conference is
open to those from disciplines such as Geography, Economics, Politics,
Cultural Studies, Public Relations, Theology, Religious Studies and
Philosophy.
Among the themes that could be considered are:
• Assessments of representations of peace and conflict in news, online
media, film, literature and other genres.
• Representing and public officials, PR and organised persuasive activities.
• The role of the ‘representative’ of peace and conflict: Who are the
representatives of conflict, peace and transitions between them? Must
the representatives of conflict and peace be formally designated as
such? What role do they play within these processes?
• The role of representing in peacebuilding and conflict resolution.
• Theoretical and/or methodological approaches to the role of
representing in peace and conflict.
• Analysis of competing representations in specific conflict situations
past and present as well as in non-fictional or fictional accounts.
• Analysis of alternative representations which challenge or have
challenged dominant representations in specific conflict and peace
situations.
• Analysis of the news and online media’s role in constructing
representations about peace and conflict and how this relates to public
understanding and participation.
• Analysis of representations in poetry, film, media and the arts which
have contributed to peace and conflict.
• Personal narratives of peace and conflict.
• Analysis of the role that religious representations play in conflict
situations, on the one hand, and in peacebuilding, on the other.
• Analysis of literary accounts which depict making use of
representations to resolve conflicts (especially but not limited to the
works regarded as ‘classics,’ including the sacred scriptures of
different religions).
• Analysis of how representations about the past conflicts are used to
help communities build a more peaceful future.
The conference is organised by the Archbishop Desmond Tutu Centre for
War and Peace Studies at Liverpool Hope University. The venue will be
the Capstone Theatre, Liverpool Hope University Creative Campus, Shaw
Street, Liverpool, L6 1HP.
Please submit abstracts for papers (word format) and posters of up to
300 words or full panel abstracts (4 papers max) to (tutu /at/ hope.ac.uk)
until 15 February 2016. Successful applicants will be notified by 11
March 2016. We encourage both formal conference papers and performative
‘provocations’, exhibitions, demonstrations, workshops, storytelling
events; or any other suitable format. Poster submissions of analysis of
the above themes are welcomed. Presentation posters should be no larger
than A1 paper size.
The organising team:
Dr Florian Zollmann, (zollmaf /at/ hope.ac.uk)
Dr Terry Phillips, (phillim /at/ hope.ac.uk)
Dr Kathrin Wagner, (wagnerk /at/ hope.ac.uk)
Dr Lynn Hilditch, (hilditl /at/ hope.ac.uk)
Dr Guy Cuthbertson, (cuthbeg /at/ hope.ac.uk)
Dr Peter Manning, (manninp /at/ hope.ac.uk)
Dr Michael Holmes, (holmesm /at/ hope.ac.uk)
Susan Forde, (12009897 /at/ hope.ac.uk)
Martha Caceres Lara, (15008659 /at/ hope.ac.uk)
http://tutu.hope.ac.uk/
https://www.facebook.com/TutuCentre
https://twitter.com/HopeTutuCentre
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