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[ecrea] Conference: CfP PANEL Regimenting The Public Sphere - the politics of visibility (2nd international Conference on Sociolinguistics)
Fri Nov 17 17:11:08 GMT 2017
status: CfP Call for papers
conference
CfP PANEL Regimenting The Public Sphere - the politics of visibility
(2nd international Conference on Sociolinguistics)
06.09.2018-08.09.2018
Budapest
The category of visibility constitutes a key dimension of the public
sphere, up to the extent that the public sphere can be characterized as
constituted in/by struggles over visibility. At the threshold of
visibility, one often encounters power struggles over what aspects of
social and cultural practices deserve a public stage, and what aspects
should be relegated to the private sphere (or made invisible
altogether). For the upcoming 2nd International Conference on
Sociolinguistics (http://ics2.elte.hu/), we would like to bring together
scholars from various backgrounds and invite them to reflect on these
struggles over visibility, which are at the heart of
many ongoing attempts to (re-)shape and (re)structure the
public sphere in our contemporary societies. We are interested in
empirical investigations that look into such struggles over visibility
from various angles, and in a variety of online and offline settings.
We welcome contributions that document and investigate actual practices
of regimenting/reclaiming the public sphere (ethnography, linguistic
landscaping), as well as work that examines the macro-discursive
structures (discourse analysis) and/or the situated communicative events
(conversation analysis, interactional sociolinguistics) through/in which
such regimenting/reclaiming is discursively negotiated.
A first kind of struggle over visibility, with a strong presence in the
current sociopolitical climate, can be referred to as “the politics of
erasure.” This politics comprises various attempts, usually initiated by
local municipal authorities, to regiment activities and practices not
because they constitute a crime or would endanger members of the public,
but because they are perceived as “polluting the public space” and/or
“scaring members of the public.” Items to be removed from the public
sphere, or to be “pushed back” beyond the boundaries of public
perception, include cultural practices (e.g., wearing a burkini, a
headscarf, etc.) and linguistic practices (e.g., foreign language
advertisements and other expressions of multilingualism), as well as
certain forms of economic activity (e.g., begging, busking etc.). Often,
such attempts to regiment the public sphere are targeting practices
and/or activities that have a linguistic, a social and an economic
component. Think, for example, of restrictions on
“appearance-degrading” businesses, which are often also migrant-owned:
night shops, shisha bars, internet shops, video stores, etc. The
politics of erasure is grounded in a vision of “appropriateness” that
re-signifies everyday activities as indexing wider socio-political
problems, and hence as undesirable (a clear example would be the
transformation of the headscarf into an index of religious conflict and
non-integration). It brands its own way of “seeing” the public space as
the only legitimate one, and hence as the only one that should be
allowed to inscribe itself into the materiality of public everyday life.
Paradoxically, this process leads to a heightened visibility of the
phenomena that are considered illegitimate.
At the other end of the continuum, one finds various attempts to
“reclaim” the public sphere, such as the various struggles waged by
minority group activists to decenter “oppressive” representations and
practices associated with the colonial past. In doing so, these
activists negotiate alternative ways of seeing/experiencing the public
sphere, decentering the hegemonic gaze that problematizes expressions of
diversity and making visible the historical patterns of insubordination
on which it is founded. Other activists pursue a more proactive
strategy, opening up the public sphere to alternative orders of
indexicality through physically “altering” the material organization of
the public space, either transiently or permanently. This can be done
within existing regulatory frameworks, as exemplified by the various
struggles for the recognition of alternative lifestyles and minority
communities (e.g., through amendments to the public calendar). On other
occasions, however, thi
s may take the form of transgressive re-territorializations that
problematize the very notion of the public realm, ranging from guerilla
gardening, over Occupy-style appropriations of squares and plazas, to
the tactics and practices of the so-called “black bloc”.
Looking at the public sphere through the lens of visibility allows us to
explore interconnections between public space, as a feature of the
material organization of the physical landscapes in which we live our
lives, and the public sphere as a discursive phenomenon. In addition to
an actual space, the public sphere is also a spatial metaphor for a set
of discursive practices and shared meanings through which we imagine
ourselves to be part of a wider network of mutual
accessibility/reflexive accountability. Of particular importance are the
various technologically mediated channels that mediate the dissemination
of these discursive practices: mass media, social media platforms, etc.
The resulting mediatized debates are a major site were struggles over
the regimentation public sphere are fought. On other occasions, however,
these mediating channels become themselves caught up in struggles over
visibility, as attempts to decenter oppressive representations often
specifically target medi
a content. Focusing on the category of visibility allows us to explore
how these different realms, ranging from physical to digital space,
mutually mediate one another, without treating one or the other as
somehow more “foundational.”
These initial musings aside, we are of course very much interested in
what you have to say on these struggles over visibility. As indicated,
we wish to bring together scholars from diverse backgrounds. If you
would like to join the panel, please send an abstract of no more than
300 words to (jan_zienkowski /at/ yahoo.com) or (sigurd.a.dhondt /at/ jyu.fi) on
January 1, 2018 by the latest.
Contact person: Jan Zienkowski
email: (Jan_Zienkowski /at/ yahoo.com)
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