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[ecrea] Panel Call for Papers IALJS-13
Tue Oct 24 23:10:07 GMT 2017
*IALJS-13, Vienna, 17-19 May 2018*
*Panel Call for Papers: Literary journalism in an age of populist
nationalism*
The rise of populist nationalism in the world is a matter of concern for
many scholars as citizens. This panel seeks to explore whether and how
it concerns us, specifically, as scholars of literary journalism.
By populist nationalism the panel has in mind developments such as the
election of Donald Trump and revival of white nationalism in the US; the
UK referendum vote to leave the EU; moves by Polish and Hungarian
governments to control cultural organisations; the list is not
exhaustive and includes movements that identify as left as well as
right. In all cases one encounters historical revisionism, the
undermining of legal norms, and alliances with other authoritarian and
populist regimes.
A working hypothesis is that such events poses a specific challenge to
the core projects of literary journalism or reportage which are to 1)
negotiate a scrupulous relationship with truth claims; 2) make room for
complexity in accounts of human motive; and 3) resist sentimentality and
myth in acknowledgements of subjectivity. The /Columbia Journalism
Review/ makes an explicit link in a December 2016 article, ‘In a time of
many questions, literary journalism provides an answer’.
<https://www.cjr.org/special_report/literary_journalism_trump_president.php
In a time of many questions, literary journalism provides ...
<https://www.cjr.org/special_report/literary_journalism_trump_president.php>
www.cjr.org
In a time of many questions, literary journalism provides an answer.
Media in the Age of Trump. By Lee Siegel December 5, 2016 ...
The study of literary journalism to date has included examination of how
it has met the challenge of totalising authority in the past. From that,
we have drawn theoretical lessons that enrich our understanding of the
genre overall. The working hypothesis of this panel is that those
lessons are /not so theoretical any more/, and not in the past.
The panel for IALJS-13 might consider (but is not restricted to) topics
such as:
* The insights that literary journalism might bring to an
understanding of populist nationalism.
* The role literary journalism plays now, compared to previous periods
of social upheaval, with examples such as the New Journalism (in the
US) or twentieth century reportage (Europe) in mind. What has
changed, and to what effect?
* In the former Soviet bloc, specifically, have past traditions in
literary journalism influenced current practice? If so, how so?
* A consideration of the ways in which literary journalism/reportage
relates to other literary strategies adopted against totalising
authority, now or in the past: for example the absurdist theatre of
Havel and Ionesco.
* What stances towards literary journalism can be detected in
countries such as Russia and China which are a) perceived by other
countries in their respective regions as imperial powers, and b)
places where examination of the genre has not yet been prominent?
* What place does social media and multimedia have in contributing to
a literary journalism that examines nationalism and populism? In
what way might those media make the job more difficult?
* What exemplars of literary journalism are being produced now, which
address the topics outlined here?
Please send me a short description (50-100 words) of your proposed
subject plus your name, affiliation and e-mail address, no later than
*November 13, 2017*.
*NB**Pre-deadline enquiries are welcome*.
//
/Dr Susan L. Greenberg, University of Roehampton,
//(s.greenberg /at/ roehampton.ac.uk)/ <mailto:(s.greenberg /at/ roehampton.ac.uk)>//
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