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[ecrea] cfp - Connecting to the Masses: 100 years from the Russian Revolution, From Agitprop to the Attention Economy
Wed Jun 21 21:27:53 GMT 2017
Connecting to the Masses: 100 Years from the Russian Revolution
From Agitprop to the Attention Economy
November 13th, 2017 at the International Institute of Social History,
Amsterdam
The relationship between governments and the people they govern has been
always hostage to rhetoric, propaganda, and strategic public relations,
as well as aggressive marketing and the influence of contemporary media
industries, altering the dynamics of healthy political communications.
Often, this relationship has thrived on charismatic leaders, the
"avant-garde", who could feel the pulse of their population’s
grievances, demands and hopes for the future. Whether the Russian
revolution of 1917 is interpreted as a product of class struggle, as an
event governed by historic laws predetermined by the alienation of the
masses by monopoly industrial capitalism, or as a violent coup by a
proto-totalitarian Bolshevik party, the Russian revolutionaries
understood and connected to the masses in a way that the autocracy,
bourgeois elites and reformists alike failed to do.
In the midst of rage, desperation and harsh everyday life conditions,
due to the pressure and failures of WW1 against Germany, food shortages,
growing poverty, inequality and alienation, the Bolsheviks felt the
undercurrents in the seas of history and spoke to the people, exactly
when the relationship between the Tsar and the population, and between
the Provisional government and the Soviets were at a crucial tipping
point. The Bolsheviks grasped the opportunity to change the world for
themselves in the here and now, rather than waiting to reform in the
future for their children. They did so violently and unapologetically
with the effects of their move running through the Cold War and the
confrontation with the West, all the way to the complex and intense
relations between Russia and the United States, in terms of failed
engagements of the past 25 years since the fall of the USSR, the first
socialist state in the world.
Connecting to the masses is critical for the success of any movement,
resurrection, protest, and revolution. The communication mechanisms for
this connection have some times evolved and other times undergone
revolutions of their own. Since the Russian centennial, scholars have
examined how media and communication affects this connection to the
masses in a double yet complimentary dynamic: how governments connect to
the masses and how masses connect to their governments.
Therefore, we invite participants to debate this relationship and the
strategies and lessons of "connecting to the masses", in light of the
development in media, technology and communication strategies over the
last century.
Potential questions include: Is it still about charismatic leadership
and movements that connect to the general population or has algorithmic
communication intervened to amplify and commodity populist leaders,
without bringing into fruition claims of digital democracy/reform or
radical socio-political change? Are the social media protests we witness
a flash in the pan or able to sustain movements, parties, organizations
in the long durée? What communication and what technologies do
contemporary movements need to advance their goals?
Areas the conference addresses are the following:
- Evolution of propaganda: From leaflet bombs to Twitter
- Artificial attention, political packaging and the so-called attention
economy
- Tactical media and tech activism in the 20th and 21st centuries
- Strategies and lessons for the use of ICTs in mobilization
- Impact of technology on revolutionary social change in the
macro-perspective
- Revolutionary-era media and communist rhetoric and transition to
post-communism
- Mediated contestation, surveillance, censorship and systems of control
- From journalism to social media gatekeepers
- Spheres and systems of political deliberation
- Evolution of the ownership of means of communication, processes of
labour reproduction in the media, culture and communication industries
- (R)evolution of technology at work, digital labour, alternative
production models
- Intelligence and cyberespionage in the 100 years span.
- Technosocial infrastructures and the politicization of health, illness
and biopolitics.
Invited Participants*
Richard Aldrich, Anton Allahar, Franco Berardi, David Berry, Sebastien
Broca, David Chandler, Cholpon Chotaeva, Cristiano Codagnone, Gabriella
Coleman, Lina Dencik, Anastasia Denisova, Mats Fridlund, Myria Georgiou,
Goodwin, Andrji Gorbachyk, Galina Gorborukova, Baruch Gottlieb, Jason
Hughes, Arne Hintz, Gulnara Ibraeva, Anastasia Kavada, Olessia Koltsova,
Garnet Kindervarter, Iliya Kiriya, Mathias Klang, Maros Krivy, Adi
Kuntsman, Adele Lindenmeyr, Geert Lovink, Peter Lunt, Jacob Matthews,
Dan Mercea, Galina Miazhevich, Peter Mihalyi, Gerassimos Moschonas,
Phoebe Moore, Zenonas Norkus, Alex Neumann, Jonathan Ong, Tamás Pál,
Despina Panagiotopoulou, Korina Patelis, Thomas Poell, Vincent Rouzé,
Maria Rovisco, Paul Reilly, Ellen Rutten, Michael Schandorf, Markus
Schultz, Nikos Smyrnaios, Serge Sych, Irina Tjurina, Marc Tuters,
Giuseppe Veltri, Anastasia Veneti, Stefania Vicari, Alex Wood.
*To be updated as attendance is confirmed. Please follow us on
Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/events/471967253135039/
<https://www.facebook.com/events/471967253135039/>and on Twitter
(@cttm_conference) for regular updates.
The conference is organised through a collaboration between Athina
Karatzogianni from the School of Media, Communication and Sociology of
the University of Leicester; Stefania Milan from the DATACTIVE research
group at the Media Studies department of the University of Amsterdam;
Andrey Rezaev from the Department of Sociology at St. Petersburg State
University; the International Institute of Social History, Amsterdam;
and the State Museum of Contemporary Art, Thessaloniki.
Please email abstracts (250w max) and/or any inquiries to Athina
Karatzogianni (athina.k /at/ gmail.com) by July 1st 2017 latest.
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