Archive for calls, February 2016

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[ecrea] CFA: Theorising Media and Conflict

Mon Feb 01 17:51:41 GMT 2016




Call for Abstracts: Theorising Media and Conflict

John Postill (RMIT)
Philipp Budka (Vienna)
Birgit Bräuchler (Monash), eds.

In a recent survey of the interdisciplinary literature on media and
conflict, Schoemaker and Stremlau (2014) found that most existing studies
display Western biases, normative assumptions and unsubstantiated claims
about the impact of media in conflict situations. With their cross-cultural
studies, ethnographic methods and ground-up theorising, anthropologists are
well placed to make a strong contribution to the advancement of this area
of scholarship.

Although a growing number of anthropologists have begun to study media in
conflict and post-conflict contexts – working on topics such as news
reporting, cyberwar, internet activism, social protest, video-making, radio
propaganda, or conflict transformation – so far they have done so in
relative isolation from one another. The result is a fragmentation of the
field and a dissipation of efforts. The aim of this interdisciplinary
volume is to bring together media anthropologists and other media and
communication scholars working to collectively address the elusive
relationships between media and conflict. On the one hand, the volume is a
continuation of a long tradition of conflict research in anthropology and
neighbouring fields. On the other, it will contribute to the consolidation
of media and conflict as a distinct area of scholarship.

Potential questions to be addressed by chapter authors include (but are not
limited to):

* Mediated conflicts: What kind of conflicts are mediated, triggered,
fuelled, extended, transformed or resolved by media?

* Mediated sites: What are the main sites of mediated conflict? How did
they come to be so central? How and when do conflicts migrate from site to
site? What’s the relationship between mediated conflict and place-making?

* (De-)escalation: What role do different media play in the escalation and
de-escalation of conflict? Is the inherent virality of social media a
contributor to the seeming volatility and ephemerality of many of today’s
conflicts?

* (Re-)mediation: How are conflicts mediated (both technologically and
interpersonally) in different historical and cultural contexts? What
materialities, infrastructures, logistics, and politics are involved in the
positioning of individuals or collectives as conflict mediators? How are
earlier media technologies remediated in connection to conflicts? What
effects does an increasing media convergence have on the unfolding of
conflicts?

* Representation and articulation: How are conflicts communicated and
represented in or through media? Who gets to represent what to whom?
Through which media? On what occasions? For what purposes? With what
consequences?

* Perception and experience: How are mediated conflicts perceived,
experienced, sensed, felt by those directly or indirectly involved in them,
and indeed by people with no connection to them? What are the auditory,
visual, haptic and other sensory dimensions at work?

* Change and continuity: What have been the main continuities and changes
in the mediation of conflict over the past 10 or 20 years? What difference
do social and mobile media make, if any, to contemporary conflicts?

* Methodology: What anthropological and other approaches and methods can be
recruited to the theorisation of media and conflict? What are their
potential strengths and limitations and what do they add to an
interdisciplinary field of study?

The edited volume *Theorising Media and Conflict* will be the third in the
European Association of Social Anthropologists (EASA) Media Anthropology
Network's series of theoretical volumes published by Berghahn. The first
volume came out in 2010 as *Theorising Media and Practice* (Bräuchler &
Postill, eds), and the second volume, *Theorising Media and Change*
(Postill, Ardevol & Tenhunen, eds) is forthcoming. The aim of the series is
to place media anthropology at the forefront of theoretical and empirical
advances in both anthropology and media and communication studies.

For some background on the offline and online discussions leading to this
volume, see E-Seminar 54 (PDF), 10-24 November 2015 at
http://www.media-anthropology.net/index.php/e-seminars

Please send your abstracts (max. 300 words) by *29 February 2016* to John
Postill ((john.postill /at/ rmit.edu.au)), Philipp Budka (
(philipp.budka /at/ univie.ac.at)) and Birgit Bräuchler ((birgitbraeuchler /at/ gmx.net)).

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