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[ecrea] ICA Media Industry Studies Interest Group -- Call for Panelists on Method and Methodology in the Political Economy of Communication
Thu Oct 20 18:57:29 GMT 2016
ICA Media Industry Studies Interest Group -- Call for Panelists on
Method and Methodology in the Political Economy of Communication
We are looking for 2-3 more panelists for the following proposed ICA
2017 panel on method and methodology in the political economy of
communication (PEC). The panel will be proposed to the Media Industry
Studies Interest Group. If you are interested in being part of the
panel, please send the following to T.C. Corrigan ((corrigan /at/ csusb.edu)
<mailto:(corrigan /at/ csusb.edu)>) by Wednesday, 10/26: 1) a topic of focus;
2) a 150-word abstract; and 3) a brief description of your
qualifications regarding the proposed topic.
Panel Title:Making the implicit explicit: Rethinking method and
methodology in the political economy of communication
Panel Organizers:
*
Thomas F. Corrigan (Assistant Professor, Department of Communication
Studies, California State University, San Bernardino)
*
Brice Nixon (Visiting Scholar, Annenberg School for Communication,
University of Pennsylvania)
Panel Description:Mosco (2009) describes the political economy of
communication (PEC) as “a major communication research perspective” (p.
1) Unlike in other major communication perspectives, though, PEC
researchers rarely articulate or justify their methods (Lent & Amazeen,
2016; Meehan, Mosco, & Wasko, 1993; Nixon, 2012). As Meehan, Mosco, and
Wasko (1993) explain, “political economy tends to treat its methods and
criteria implicitly; practitioners are expected to follow criteria
implicit in the paradigm and then to select the method best suited to
the problem” (pp. 112-113).
This methods gap is problematic, though. How can PEC researchers share
their approaches with one another or justify their findings to the wider
scholarly community without explicitly articulating their methods?
Failure to do so invites confusion and suspicion. As Meehan, Mosco, and
Wasko (1993) argue, “The process of finding and analyzing data is and
should remain as rigorous for political economists as for other media
researchers. Research sources and data must be evaluated; the criteria
for that assessment must be made explicit” (p. 113, emphasis added).
This panel aims to make PEC’s implicit methods explicit. What research
methods do (or should) PEC researchers use? What are the strengths and
limitations of those methods? What are their origins? What makes them
distinct (if anything) to PEC? And to what extent are those methods
compatible with other critical media and communication studies
approaches? Nixon (2012) also distinguishes between PEC’s “analytical
methods” (i.e., data collection and analysis techniques) and its “method
of reasoning,” which he identifies as a “historical materialist
dialectical method.” Indeed, Hardy (2014) argues that what characterizes
critical political economy is not a particular method, but “the
questions asked and the orientation of scholars” (p. 7). Thus, this
panel welcomes contributions that speak to PEC method, broadly understood.
This panel also aims to begin a wider conversation about the place of
method and methodology in PEC. Why have method and methodology been
blindspots, historically, in PEC, and what are the consequences (both
positive and negative) of this tendency? How can PEC researchers better
communicate their methods without succumbing to the methodolatry of
other communication sub-disciplines? Political economists have regularly
sought to “rethink,” “renew,” and “reassess” the project (Meehan et. al,
1993; Mosco, 1996). Can method and methodology be an entry point for
those processes?
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