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[ecrea] Call for Abstracts for *The Media Persona in Digital Media Culture* International Research Seminar
Mon Jan 29 23:11:28 GMT 2018
CFP:
http://mcc.ku.dk/research/focus-areas/fitt/arrangementer/the-media-persona-in-digital-media-culture/
The Media Persona in Digital Media Culture
International Research-seminar May 9th. 2018 University of Copenhagen
Confirmed Keynote Speaker: Professor David Marshall Deakin University,
Melbourne, Australia
Call for abstracts:
DEADLINE: March 1st, 2018: 250-300 words for paper presentations.
Abstracts should be submitted to (h.k.haastrup /at/ hum.ku.dk) and
(moestrup /at/ hum.ku.dk)
One striking transformation in contemporary media culture is how
individual self- presentations have become increasingly public and
ubiquitous. We all make our mediated selves public in numerous ways both
online and offline as part of our everyday life. Lately the ‘media
persona’ has been re-introduced as a key concept in contemporary media
culture notably by P. David Marshall (2015) as a way of understanding
the changing relationship between public and private and to understand
public identity as a strategic force in the attention economy. The media
persona - especially within the media industry – is currently
challenging established traditions of public performance and factual
media genres: Professional journalists from legacy media report news
with a personal/subjective voice, they engage in confessional journalism
and use social media for self-promotion; ordinary citizens display their
public/private selves, including personal tastes and predilections, on
vlogs and blogs, to gain a public voice and recognition among peer
followers; celebrities manage their corporate brand online when
promoting their philanthropies as well as their most recent
film/book/album; and even public intellectuals/academics use digital
media platforms to perform their societal critique and promote their
public image as intellectuals.
Research on ‘the media persona’ has been done in many different fields –
primarily within film and media studies, including media and
sociology/psychology (Horton and Wohl 1956, Goffman 1956, Meyrowitz
1985), film studies (Dyer 1979, King 2015), critical theory (Lowenthal
1944), studies of political communication (Corner & Pels 2003), studies
of social media and self-presentation (Senft 2008, Marwick and boyd
2011), celebrity studies (Rojek 2001, Turner 2004, Wheeler 2013) and
performance studies (Auslander 2015). Finally, persona studies have
recently been proposed as a new, specific but interdisciplinary research
field (Marshall 2010, 2013, 2015, Moore, Barbour and Lee 2017).
This research seminar invites scholars from all these research areas
with the aim of furthering the study of the media persona by discussing
theoretical and analytical frameworks as well as methodological
approaches that can make us better understand the implications of the
ubiquitous individual, both public and private, self-presentations in
contemporary, digital media culture.
We invite abstracts on the following topics (though not limited to these
issues):
* How media personas operate within different fields of culture:
literature, music, film, etc. * Amateur and professional media persona’s
and the attention economy
* The challenges of the media persona to factual genres
* The challenges of media persona to professional categories such as
‘the journalist’
* Media personas and the TV/radio-presenter
* Media personas and the para-social
* The media persona as a strategy on social media
* The intellectual/scientist as media persona
* Distinctions/overlaps between celebrities and media personas
* The relationship between the media persona and institutional affiliations
* Theoretical frameworks with which we can conceptualize and grasp the
notion of the media persona
* Analyses of specific media personas in contemporary media culture
* Methodological approaches to the study of the media persona
Practical information: It is possible to participate as a presenter or
if you register as a participant (no later than March 31st), please
contact (h.k.haastrup /at/ hum.ku.dk) and (moestrup /at/ hum.ku.dk). Please be advised
that there is limited room for participants. However there is no
registration fee and coffee and lunch during the research seminar is
included for presenters and registered participants.
Acceptance/decline notices will be distributed by the end of March 2018.
Keynote presentation: P. David Marshall: “The Registers of Contemporary
Persona: Affect, Emotion, Intimacy, Gesture and the cultural
implications of the Pandemic Mediatized Self”
The public presentation of the self – what can be called “persona” - is
a complex and unstable strategy and performance that is deployed by the
individual to inhabit a collective world. In the contemporary moment
with the exigencies of online culture and its forms of communication,
persona is pandemic: in other words, through social media predominantly
but also through other platforms and applications, we are all inhabiting
a mediatized version of ourselves for much of our daily lives.
This presentation focuses on the registers of communication that are
being privileged and enacted in online culture through our constructions
of personas. It identifies a shift in public communication where the
deployment of at least a greater revelation of the self is enacted
through more emotional and affective registers. Some of this
transformation can be read and examined as the migration of
interpersonal communication into social and mediatized settings and
exchanges which has allowed our messages to be interspersed with what
may have been perceived as more private and even intimate registers.
The presentation will explore this through the normalization of a
different emotional registers in online culture. On Twitter and
Facebook, we page2image710469840when we “like” a particular post and we
engage in “sharing” our likes. Through acronyms and hashtags we connect
to others through a structure of affective bonding. Indeed, on a social
media platform such as Instagram, failing to page2image710489104a photo
produces negative emotions of not caring and not being engaged. Trends
via social media and its permutations into legacy media are often the
amassing of sentiment and sharing engagement. The presentation will
investigate the new comfortability of emotion – and emoji use as one
example – that establishes this shifted public culture. It will conclude
with speculation around how this prevalent emotive persona culture has
been a significant factor in the destabilization of information and news
in contemporary culture as we privilege feeling over something as
neutral as fact in a transformed public/political culture transnationally.
page2image710539808 page2image710540080
BIO: P. David Marshall holds a Professorship and Personal Chair in New
Media, Communication and Cultural Studies at Deakin University in
Melbourne Australia. He is the world-leading scholar in the study of
celebrity and public personality systems. Along with many articles and
book chapters, Professor Marshall’s books include Celebrity and Power
(Minnesota, 2nd edition 2014), Celebrity Persona Pandemic (Minnesota,
2016), New Media Cultures (Oxford Arnold, 2004), Web Theory (2003) and
Fame Games (Cambridge, 2000). His edited or co-edited books include A
Companion to Celebrity (Blackwell-Wiley, 2016), Contemporary Publics
(Palgrave, 2016), and The Celebrity Culture Reader (Routledge, 2006).
His current research has focussed on the concept of persona and the now
associated sub-field of Persona Studies which investigates the strategic
construction of the public display of the self, both in its online forms
and in other transforming contexts. His forthcoming research and
publications include: the General Editor of the 6-volume Cultural
History of Fame (for Bloomsbury Academic), the co-authored Advertising
and Promotional Cultures: Case Histories (Palgrave, Jan. 2018) and
Persona Studies: Celebrity, Identity and the Transformation of the
Public Self (June 2018). His expertise has led to interviews published
in the New York Times, Globe and Mail, Sydney Morning Herald as well as
appearances on other legacy media including the BBC, CNN, Fox News, the
ABC and many other media outlets around the world. He maintains a very
intermittent personal blog at www.pdavidmarshall.com
The seminar is organized by Helle Kannik Haastrup and Steffen Damkjær
Moestrup as part of the Research Project: From Ivory Tower to Twitter:
Rethinking the Cultural Critic in Contemporary Media Culture (2015-19),
funded by the Danish Research Council for Independent Research: Culture
and Communication, lead by Associate Professor Nete Nørgaard Kristensen.
Official project website: http://mcc.ku.dk/research/focus-areas/fitt/
LINK to CFP:
http://mcc.ku.dk/research/focus-areas/fitt/arrangementer/the-media-persona-in-digital-media-culture/
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