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[ecrea] cfp Two-day Workshop on Politics in a post-truth era
Tue Feb 14 11:41:27 GMT 2017
cfp
Two-day workshop: Politics in a post-truth era
10th - 11th July 2017, Bournemouth University
The concept of post-truth, where facts are deemed less important than
beliefs, is one that has recently been frequently invoked when making
sense of the modern political campaigning environment. The suggestion is
that political campaigns exploit and reinforce strongly held beliefs,
encouraging the disavowal of contrasting facts, in order to undermine
support for the arguments of opponents.
Post-truth has become most associated with campaigns that invoke more
populist arguments. Such arguments give voice to privately held beliefs,
often hidden by norms of societies which reinforce pejorative
stereotypes based on religious and racial differences, gendering of
roles and discussing myths of us (as a nation and people) and the others
whose differences mark them as not us. Hence there are far-reaching
implications of such practices for democratic societies.
The workshop will explore the underlying themes and implications of this
phenomenon.
KEY QUESTIONS
1) Is post truth really new, or simply a synonym for the exaggerations
and spin long associated with the techniques of political campaigns? Or
have political campaigns been proven to lie more?
2) What does a post-truth campaign look like, how is the communication
constructed to tap into belief systems and feed the dynamics of a
post-truth (belief-based) political environment?
3) Why might beliefs have more power in influencing voting behaviour
than more fact, logic or reason based arguments?
4) How does post-truth link to the models of a marketised and
professionalised campaign environment?
5) What does post-truth tell us about the current and future state of
democratic engagement and of democracy itself?
Contributions need not be full papers, rather informed arguments that
promote discussion - although they should have the potential to be full
or part papers. The workshop seeks to tease out what post-truth means,
how this is encouraged during political campaigns, its root causes,
impacts on election outcomes and, importantly, what are the implications
for democracy.
PUBLICATION
The longer-term aim is to develop an edited collection of work that
would include solo-authored or joint publications from participants that
address these questions. The volume will be published in the Palgrave
series Political Campaigning and Communication.
DATES
The event will be held on July 10th and 11th with a workshop dinner on
the evening of the 10th. There will be no attendance costs - the venue,
refreshments and evening meal will be covered jointly by funding from
the BU Centre for Politics and Media Research and the PSA Political
Marketing Group. Participants should expect to cover travel and
accommodation. The venue will be the Bournemouth University's Executive
Business Centre close to Bournemouth train station.
ABSTRACTS
Interested participants should propose their participation by offering a
short 200-300 word abstract that summarises the main points of the
argument, case studies and evidence drawn upon and the broader
socio-political implications into which their argument offers insights.
The deadline for abstracts is 1600hrs GMT on Friday 6th April 2017.
Please email them to
(dlilleker /at/ bournemouth.ac.uk)<mailto:(dlilleker /at/ bournemouth.ac.uk)>
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