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[ecrea] CFP: Communicating Power: Energy, Canada and the Field(s) of Communication
Mon Sep 26 20:03:56 GMT 2016
CFP: Special Issue, /Canadian Journal of Communication/, Winter 2018
*Communicating Power: *
*Energy, Canada and the Field(s) of Communication*
**
Guest Editors: Shane Gunster, Imre Szeman, Matthew Greaves, Bob Neubauer
Proposals (500 words): due *December 1, 2016.*
Final papers: due *June 1, 2017.*
Questions of energy dominate Canada’s contemporary political, economic
and cultural landscape. Governments at all levels have, to varying
degrees, recognized climate change as a political priority. Yet many
also champion carbon extraction and export as essential to Canadian
economic growth and prosperity. Many in the oil and gas sector likewise
admit to the need for climate change to be integrated into regimes of
energy regulation and governance, but also insist upon the long-term
viability and even expansion of the fossil-fuel industry as well as our
ongoing dependence upon it in everyday life.
The rapid decline of global energy prices, coupled with the uneven but
extraordinary growth of renewables, has raised significant doubts about
the economic and technological logic of such arguments. The recent
scale, pace and intensity of climate change have only underscored the
need for an immediate transition away from fossil fuels. Industry and
government proposals to expand carbon infrastructure – pipelines,
fracking, coal and LNG exports, etc. – have, unsurprisingly, been met
with stiff resistance from First Nations, environmental groups, local
communities and others. But the fight against ‘extractivism’ is more
than simply a defensive struggle to protect local eco-systems,
economies, communities and ways of life: it also generates and sustains
alternative visions of how transformations in the production,
circulation, governance and use of energy can ground new forms of
social, cultural and political life.
Historically, critical engagement around questions of energy has been
sparse in the humanities and social sciences, and the field of
communication is no exception. In recent years, however, scholars from
a wide range of disciplines have devoted increasing attention to the
social, cultural and political dimensions of energy and, in turn,
explored the often invisible influence that historically specific energy
formations exercise upon and through a variety of disparate phenomena,
including habits, values, ethics, ideologies and institutions. It is to
this growing body of literature – often dubbed ‘the energy humanities’ –
that this special issue intends to contribute.
Communication and media studies are well situated to engage with this
emerging area of study. Though rarely remarked upon, Harold Innis'
transportation-oriented approach to communication implies the centrality
of energy and fuel to Canadian development. Today, the numerous
sub-disciplines of communication studies offer a variety of perspectives
to address key questions concerning energy and Canadian society. For
instance, how does Canadian energy development interface with the
political economy of contemporary Canadian communication systems? How
might cultural studies and related approaches understand the changing
role of energy discourse in Canadian national identity and popular
culture? How do news and journalism mediate our understanding and
engagement with the political and economic dimensions of energy
development? How has the emergence and growth of social media
transformed the promotional and/or oppositional communications
strategies of corporations, governments and social movements? How might
research into political, corporate and civil society communications
inform our understanding of social and political conflicts around
different forms of energy? And what insights might be gained from a
technology studies approach to the production and circulation of energy?
We invite contributions from scholars studying energy from the vantage
point of communication and media studies. Possible topics include (but
are not limited to):
·Journalism and news coverage of energy.
·Advertising, public relations and ‘promotional’ energy culture.
·Energy development and decolonialization.
·Energy and communication/cultural theory.
·Alternative, oppositional, activist and/or utopian energy discourses.
·Representations of energy in media and popular culture.
·Visualizations of energy.
·The (im)materiality of energy in everyday life.
·Audience/public perceptions of energy.
·Energy and/as technology.
·Energy and/as national identity.
·Energy subcultures.//
The editors welcome proposals for academic papers as well as review and
photo essays. Proposals, due on *December 1, 2016*, should be no longer
than 500 words, and briefly describe the topic, method and principal
objectives of the research. Final papers will be due by *June 1, 2017*.
All proposals, and any further inquiries, should be sent by email to
(sgunster /at/ sfu.ca) <mailto:(sgunster /at/ sfu.ca)>.
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