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[ecrea] CFP: Satirical Discourse in Troubled Times
Mon Oct 02 13:45:56 GMT 2017
CFP: Satirical Discourse in Troubled Times – Deadline Extended
The Fourteenth International Congress of Qualitative Inquiry
May 16-19, 2018
University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign (USA)
Session Organizer:
Kevin Howley
Professor of Media Studies
Department of Communication
DePauw University
(_khowley /at/ depauw.edu) <mailto:(khowley /at/ depauw.edu)>_
On July 4, 1852, the former slave and abolitionist leader Frederick
Douglass, thought to be alive and well by the current occupant of the
White House, famously proclaimed: “At a time like this, scorching irony,
not convincing argument, is needed. O! had I the ability, and could
reach the nation’s ear, I would, today, pour forth a stream, a fiery
stream of biting ridicule, blasting reproach, withering sarcasm, and
stern rebuke.” Douglass’s recognition of the value and importance of
pointed satire in troubled times is deeply relevant to the current
historical moment. From climate change and the rise of authoritarianism
to austerity politics and the criminalization of dissent, these are most
assuredly troubled times.
Drawing on classic and contemporary scholarship that examines the
discursive power of political dissent in the satiric register, this
session seeks to address the following questions: What role does satire
play in such vexed and perilous times as these? Do we laugh to keep from
crying? More critically, are we, as cultural critic Neil Postman
famously put it, merely “amusing ourselves to death”? Or is satire a
potent, if somewhat underappreciated, resource for resistance,
resilience, and renewal in the wake of the ascent of anti-democratic
forces; the deepening of social, political and economic inequalities;
and the wholesale destruction of our fragile ecosystem? In
correspondence with this year’s conference theme, Qualitative Inquiry in
Troubled Times, this session examines the form, function, and political
efficacy of satirical discourse in contemporary culture.
Theoretical and empirical papers employing qualitative methodologies may
include, but are not limited to, the following lines of inquiry:
* Satire as creative resistance
* Political mobilization within and through satire
* Satirical discourse and digital culture
* Satirizing neoliberalism
* Political satire in national, international, and transnational contexts
* Limits and possibilities of racial satire
* Assessing the efficacy of political satire
* Form and content in satirical discourse
* Satirical interventions in public policy
* Historical perspectives on political satire
Send 300-word abstracts, a short biographical statement, and contact
information to the session organizer no later than October 30,
2017 <(_khowley /at/ depauw.edu) <mailto:(khowley /at/ depauw.edu)>_>.
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