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[ecrea] CFP -- communication +1 -- Media:Culture:Policy.
Tue Sep 27 12:20:38 GMT 2016
http://www.communicationplusone.org/dialogues/cfp-mediaculturepolicy/
CFP – Media:Culture:Policy
communication +1 invites submissions for its upcoming issue,
Media:Culture:Policy.
Edited by Sean Johnson Andrews, Janice Peck, Gilbert B. Rodman, and Fan Yang
The relationship between culture and policy has long been a major topic
for media and cultural studies, but we hope to broaden what we mean by
cultural policy – from policies that are explicitly regulating something
we call the “cultural” – including media or traditional rituals or
symbols – to include the practice of policy-making and the cultural
legitimation of law and policy itself, regardless of the object or
dimension of social life it regulates. In short, pieces in this
collection would argue for (or at least accept) an understanding of
policy as a cultural production, representing a certain ideological
outlook, and therefore expect cultural policy studies to consider a
wider range of policies; at the same time, it would be interested in the
cultural mechanisms through which policies are promulgated and enforced
– from think tanks to social media flak, from the global circulation of
ideologies to the local practices of appropriation/resistance. In a
sense, then, it is an understanding of policy that highlights its mutual
constitution of and through culture. In the tradition of Policing the
Crisis, it asks us to think about the dialectical process of cultural
legitimation that is needed to make a set of policies seem reasonable
and just, and the way that policies and laws then go on to determine the
culture of the future. Media and communications are a central channel
for these processes, making their regulation all the more important.
Contributions to this collection would try to keep all three of these
dimensions in mind as they explore a broader array of policy areas.
We welcome submissions that push at the traditional boundaries of
cultural policy studies. We are especially interested in exploring key
areas of contemporary life as locations of that dialectic of culture,
media, and policy and sites of political and social struggle, for example,
More conventional areas of cultural policy and media studies,
such as work on copyright, open access, privacy, data mining, internet
filtering, neutrality, surveillance, etc. in national and transnational
contexts
Education policy, using a cultural legitimation approach (for
instance Sandra Stein, The Culture of Education Policy).
Environmental policy, especially the cultural effects of the oil
industry involvement in U.S. and global debates about climate change and
the role of media in those debates.
Law/policing policy and the expansion of the carceral
state/prison-industrial complex (e.g. Michelle Brown, The Culture of
Punishment).
Health (physical & mental) policy, such as looking at the
dramatic expansion of the pharmaceutical industry and corresponding
explosion of bio-medical explanations for social & personal distress.
Transportation policy, especially the privileging of automobility
in both “developed” and “developing” worlds.
Food policy as cultural policy – and the cultural representation
of food from those in the commercial mass media to the role of the food
industry in health research, as in the recent revelations over sugar
research in the 1960s.
The relationship between urban policy and media representations
in transnational locales, such as in the work of Steve Macek and Mike Davis.
Policies on other controversial recent policy areas, from tax
breaks and welfare reform, to (im)migration, drone warfare, torture, and
the “global war on terror.”
And the question of who has the power to make policy and how.
Please submit short proposals of no more than 500 words by December
19th, 2016 to (communicationplusone /at/ gmail.com). Review the overall C+1
submission guidelines for relevant information:
http://scholarworks.umass.edu/cpo/policies.html
Review of submissions will be complete by late January, with invitations
sent shortly after.
Upon invitation, full text submissions will be due April 10th, 2017,
with expected publication in September 2017.
About the Journal
The aim of communication +1 is to promote new approaches to and open new
horizons in the study of communication from an interdisciplinary
perspective. We are particularly committed to promoting research that
seeks to constitute new areas of inquiry and to explore new frontiers of
theoretical activities linking the study of communication to both
established and emerging research programs in the humanities, social
sciences, and arts. Other than the commitment to rigorous scholarship,
communication +1 sets no specific agenda. Its primary objective is to
create is a space for thoughtful experiments and for communicating these
experiments.
For free access to the issue, and all of communication +1, please visit
http://scholarworks.umass.edu/cpo/ .
communication +1 is an open access journal supported by University of
Massachusetts Amherst Libraries and the Department of Communication
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