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[ecrea] CFP: Media and Student Protest
Wed Jun 08 05:45:35 GMT 2016
*Call of papers: Special Issue of/African Journalism Studies/: Media and
Student Protest*
*Edited by Herman Wasserman and Shakuntala Rao*
**
From Cape Town to Delhi to Oxford, from Santiago to Sheffield, in
Senegal, Kenya, the US and Canada - student protest defines our
contemporary times. In South Africa, student protests demanding the
decolonization of tertiary education have led to the closure of
universities and violent clashes on campuses nationwide. At Jawaharlal
Nehru University in Delhi, students were arrested for ‘anti-Indian’
slogans, students at Oxford – like their counterparts in Cape Town –
have demanded the removal of a statue of the colonialist Cecil John
Rhodes and students across the US have marched to demand safer space for
women and people of colour. In Sheffield, students occupied an
auditorium to protest the marketization of higher education in the UK,
while Ethiopian students have been involved in deadly protests by the
Oromo ethnic group. These protests resonate with others over different
yet related issues, such as the #blacklivesmatter protests against
police brutality that were appropriated by students protesting in South
Africa, and have historical antecedents, for example, the Je'n a Marre
protests at Cheikh Anta Diop University in 2011 that played a key role
in the fall of President Abdolaye Wade. In this context it is also
fitting to recall that this year marks the 40^th anniversary of the
Soweto uprising in South Africa, where students clashed with police in a
deadly confrontation with the apartheid state.
Students have claimed public and digital spaces in response to local and
global injustices, such as structural racism, sexual violence, material
inequalities, political oppression, and corrupt nexus of universities,
governments, and corporations. Paul Gilroy writes about the ‘shared
vocabulary’ that linked students around the world by means of the
internet, a‘shared poetics’ that ‘helps them to constitute a virtual
community which may be widely dispersed’.Particularly striking is that
these student protests have not been initiated or directed by
traditional social movement organizations, but appear to be spontaneous
movements ‘from below.'While these instances and events of popular
contestation have been celebrated, the protests have been called into
question for their durability. Further, such protests are at risk of
being perceived as obsolete in the lights of colonial and national
independences and civil rights victories, giving the illusion that the
world has resolved structural injustices and that we are now living in a
post-racial, post-feminist, post-gay and post-colonial moment. Student
protests in places like India and Chile have also incited backlash,
leading to state-sanctioned violence, repression, surveillance, and
other disciplinary measures.
As was the case with the protests of the ‘Arab Spring’, it is easy to
overstate the role of social media in amplifying the social forces that
led to the protests. Yet the rise and use of social media, hashtag
communication initiated via Twitter and Facebook, have undeniably become
‘spaces’ where discussions of injustices and political action are taking
place. The legacy media of newspapers, television and radio often had
difficulty catching up with events as they unfolded online, yet
performed important curatorial and analytical functions that framed the
protests in significant ways.
Some of the questions we invite contributors to this special issue to
ask are:
· What is the role of media in initiating student protest and social change?
· Do media technologies reconfigure the ways we protest, express
dissent, build coalitions and mobilize collective action?
· Is there a space for protest in the neoliberal university? Which
protests are heard and by whom, and how is the process of speaking and
listening facilitated by various forms of media?
· What are the connections between identity politics, protest and media?
Deadline for submissions: 1 October 2016.
Manuscripts should be uploaded to Manuscript
Central,https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/recq and conform to/African
Journalism Studies’/editorial guidelines, found
here:http://www.tandfonline.com/action/authorSubmission?journalCode=recq20&page=instructions
Herman Wasserman
Professor of Media Studies
Director: Centre for Film and Media Studies
University of Cape Town
Private Bag X3
Rondebosch
7700
South Africa
Email <mailto:(herman.wasserman /at/ uct.ac.za)>
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