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[ecrea] Call for Chapter Contributions to New Volume on Media, Culture and Technology in Africa and the Caribbean
Mon May 28 20:48:32 GMT 2018
Chapter contributions are being invited for a new edited volume
provisionally titled:
**
*'Media, Culture and Technology in the Global South: *
*Re-imagining Communication and Identity in Africa and the Caribbean'.*
**
The**volume editors are Professor Hopeton Dunn of The University of the
West Indies, Professor Dumisani Moyo of University of Johannesburg, Dr
William Lesitaokana of University of Botswana and Dr Shanade Barnabas,
University of Johannesburg.
**
*Background*
Despite more than a half a century into political independence, most
African and Caribbean countries still face daunting realities about the
future of their societies, including economic survival, technological
change, issues of identity, language, cultural retentions, new media
practices, and the social impact of emerging knowledge networks.
Global technologies have emerged to challenge these societies and
complement traditional media and established cultural production
systems, in an era now described as the “Fourth Industrial Revolution”.
Technologies such as the internet of things, robotics, artificial
intelligence (AI), algorithms, block chain and the smart mobile
applications have emerged to disrupt, or as some may argue, to reinforce
the global status quo and create new challenges or opportunities for the
Global South. Indigenous technologies and practices have often remained
side-lined or untapped in some contexts, while many users gravitate to
the latest innovations from the North.
Many of the attendant cultural processes and overarching technologies
have not been adequately analysed, researched and documented. The
ongoing impacts of a digital eco-system, neural networks and AI on the
culture, language, lifestyles, human rights, governance systems,
intellectual property, ethical norms and civic responsibilities in
Africa and the Caribbean remain in urgent need of interdisciplinary
study and renewed critical analysis.
How are cultures in these varied countries being impacted
by such developments? How can public communication be re-imagined in
this constantly changing global context? Can indigenous innovation and
cultural interaction be stimulated to generate more local content for
popular consumption? And can the Global South enhance its cultural
influence and information counterflow and not simply become mere markets
of the industrialised North?
The book will be a contribution to addressing these gaps. Original work
by authors can focus within single regions or countries and need not
simultaneously cover both Africa and the Caribbean, although cross
regional analyses are also invited.
*
*
*Topics*
Among the subjects for consideration as chapters are the following
indicative topics:
· Media Histories in the Context of Political and Technological Change
· Theorizing Media, Communications and Technology from the South
· Communication, Resistance and Political Change
· Culture, Identity and Society
· Decolonization of Media and Communications Services
· Economic Reform, Empowerment and Change in Africa and the Caribbean
· Communications and Indigenous Cultures
· Diversity in Communications and Cultural Policy: Gender, Race,
Class, Ethnicity
· Ethnographies of News-gathering and Dissemination
· Small States, Technology and Economic Development
· Media and Disability, Media and Children, Media and Diaspora
· Alterative Media in Repressive Environments
· Community Media, Development and Democracy
· Public Relations, IMC and Strategic Communication in the South
· Media, Music and Culture in the Caribbean and Africa
· Broadcasting Regulations and Policy Reforms in the South
· Social Media, Mobile Technologies, Youth and Instant Access
· Game Technology, Animation and New Creatives
· Ethics for Media and Technology in a Changing Environment
· New Legal Challenges to Freedom of Expression
· Popular Culture, Media and the Internet
· Artificial Intelligence, Robotics and the Future
· Blockchain, Digital Assets and Electronic Transactions: Impacts
in the South
· Cyber Security, Data Protection and Digital Right in Developing
Countries
· Internet of Things, Internet of People
· Network Neutrality: Power and New Challenges to Internet Access
Chapter contributions can be made from a wide range of conceptual and
philosophical approaches. However, each chapter must be soundly based in
the critical tradition and with theoretical underpinnings of the area
under treatment. The submission of newly completed empirical work is
especially encouraged, bringing fresh research-based insights to topics
under consideration.
*Submission Timelines:*
Chapter abstracts of 300 words as expressions of interest should be
submitted to:
Hopeton Dunn at (hopetondunn /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(hopetondunn /at/ gmail.com)> and
copied to (dumisanim /at/ uj.ac.za) <mailto:(dumisanim /at/ uj.ac.za)>_,
(_lesitaokana /at/ mopipi.ub.bw) <mailto:(lesitaokana /at/ mopipi.ub.bw)>_ and
(__sbbarnabas /at/ uj.ac.za) <mailto:(sbbarnabas /at/ uj.ac.za)> __by *June*_* 30,
2018. *Authors of selected abstracts will be notified within a month of
their expressions of interest. Selected chapters must be 5,000 to 6,000
words, in APA style. Completed chapters should be submitted to the
editors by *October 31, 2018.*
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