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[ecrea] CFP: Book Chapters on Conservative News
Sat Mar 04 07:05:27 GMT 2017
*CFP for Book Chapters**/: News on the Right: Studying Conservative News
Cultures/***
The recent surge of populist, nationalist, and authoritarian politics
has brought to light an immense resistance against modern, professional
journalism’s claims to truth and fairness. The trending notion of a
“post-truth” age may not be a satisfying diagnosis of journalism’s
predicament, but it signifies that a long battle has intensified over
how news institutions discern truths and prioritize key facts and
voices. While not alone, conservative news organizations have been at
the front lines of that battle for decades, which begs the questions:
How have conservatives approached the question of news and its veracity?
Indeed, what is the ‘news’ on the right?
The aim of this collection is to bring focus to conservative news and
information as a crucial area for academic inquiry, especially for
critical media studies and journalism studies. Despite several important
works historicizing the growth of conservative news, there remains a
relative dearth of scholarship on conservative news cultures and, even
more importantly, a lack of continuity and exchange of ideas among the
outposts where such scholarship is underway. To start bridging this
disconnect, this book will bring together an interdisciplinary array of
scholars to build upon key questions, enrich debates, and share
knowledge about the currents of conservative media. Conservative news
has become a tremendously powerful platform in the United States,
wielding a vast influence on the terms of political discourse. Some of
the major questions we pose for thinking about conservative news
include: What principles and habits have these news cultures adapted for
discerning truth and falsehood? For judging news selection and
prioritization? How have the aesthetics of conservative news developed?
How do conservative news producers and consumers see their purpose
within a larger, more heterogeneous public sphere? What actors, historic
circumstances, and affective dynamics have shaped conservative news
norms? How have those norms differed across factions and moments?
This collection will focus mostly on conservative news cultures centered
in the United States, but we are also seeking contributors who can offer
transnational and comparative perspectives. We are looking for
contributors who will draw on cultural history, political economy, and
cultural studies approaches to studying conservative news, the growth of
its media infrastructure, its diverse publics, its normative
propositions, and related topics. While we are seeking case studies
among other approaches, we hope all contributors will connect their
research to broad questions or lines of research relating to
conservative news – i.e. we are looking for studies that clearly
articulate significant claims beyond the analysis of a single text. We
would like contributors to submit abstracts of no more than 500 words.
We also ask that contributors be willing to share their drafts with each
other, so that we may recommend contributors address each others’ ideas
during revisions.
For a preliminary draft of our proposal, see:
https://ajdotorg.wordpress.com/news-on-the-right-full-proposal/
Schedule:
Abstracts due: April 30,^th 2017
Decisions on proposals: May 30^th
Proposal to presses: June 1^st
Chapter drafts: November 1^st
Revisions: February 1st, 2018
Please send abstracts or questions to: (rightnewscfp /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(rightnewscfp /at/ gmail.com)>
We seek contributions centering on the following themes:
* The mythology of the liberal media
* The affective registers and/or aesthetics of conservative media
* Journalistic sensibilities of conservative news producers
* Journalistic sensibilities of conservative news audiences
* Conservative news and movement infrastructure
* Methodological questions and dilemmas for scholarship on right wing
news cultures
* Right wing news and media technologies
*Editors *
Anthony M. Nadler is an Assistant Professor of Media and Communication
Studies at Ursinus College. He is the author of /Making the News
Popular: Mobilizing U.S. News Audiences /(2016, University of Illinois
Press). His latest research project focuses on the growth of online
conservative news and opinion outlets.
A.J. Bauer is a Mellon/ACLS Dissertation Completion Fellow and Doctoral
Candidate in the Department of Social & Cultural Analysis at New York
University. His work has appeared in /The Guardian/, /The New Inquiry/
and /Social Test: Periscope/, and is forthcoming in /American
Journalism/. His dissertation, “Before Fair and Balanced: Conservative
Media Activism and the Rise of the New Right” will be defended this spring.
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