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[ecrea] CARGC CFP Popular Culture and Coloniality: Decolonizing Global Media and Communication
Tue Sep 18 02:40:09 GMT 2018
We are currently accepting abstracts for the Biennial CARGC (Center for
Advanced Research in Global Communication) Fellows Led Conference in
Philadelphia, PA at the Annenberg School for Communication. We hope to
see you there!
CFP is below and also linked: https://cargcsouthbysoutheast.com/
Abstract deadline is October 1, 2018
Over the past three decades, intellectual energy in global media studies
has worked to decolonize the field. Building on these legacies and
others across the humanities and social sciences, the inaugural
CARGC-fellows biennial conference seeks to examine the relationship
between popular culture and coloniality. Using popular culture as avenue
through which to examine global geo-politics and communication, the
conference invites submissions that critically examine affect, power,
representation, and politics in shifting technological landscapes. In
doing so, this one-day conference asks: how can critical, theoretical,
and empirical studies of popular culture push global media studies to
further examine the production of knowledge?
We invite papers that work critically to further decolonize media
studies and unmoor scholarship from sedimentary understandings of place,
space, time, and power beyond determinist discourses like the
essentialization of media and technology. The CARGC symposium solicits
scholarship from early career scholars that:
* Uses popular culture artifacts such as music, melodrama, digital and
social media, film, performance, folk culture, television, comics,
cartoons, street art, print media, memes, comedy, and more to
interrogate ideas of place, beyond the binaries of local/global,
traditional/modern, west/rest, and the boundaries and possibilities of
comparative research; global is not simply scholarship outside the
hegemonic West but rather an orientation.
* Observes the experiences of audiences alongside the political economy
of cultural production and consumption in order to analyze power beyond
the dichotomy of oppression/resistance and pursue instead the generative
spaces between, outside, next to, or beyond dualisms.
* Interrogates media and technological platforms as sites of popular
cultural production, while focusing on claim-making and meaning-making
processes of active audiences and digital consumers;
* Imagines political bodies, subjectivities, and affect by seeking out
and analyzing representations of underrepresented voices, cultures,
bodies, and abilities;
* Explores overlapping histories of the popular and of popular culture
in order to brush history against the grain;
* Otherwise uses the production and consumption of popular culture in
order to rethink the production of knowledge, challenging eurocentrism,
elitism, and other frameworks of power, offering other ways of knowing.
Interested participants should send abstracts of 250
(wordscargcfellowsconference /at/ gmail.com <http://gmail.com>)
<mailto:(cargcfellowsconference /at/ gmail.com <http://gmail.com>)>by
October 1, 2018.
About CARGC:
The Center for Advanced Research in Global Communication at the
Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania
produces and promotes scholarly research on global communication and
public life. As an institute for advanced study dedicated to global
media studies, we revisit enduring questions and engage pressing matters
in geopolitics and communication. Our vision of “inclusive
globalization” recognizes plurality and inequality in global media,
politics, and culture. Our translocal approach fuses multidisciplinary
regional knowledge with theory and methodology in the humanities and
social sciences. This synthesis of deep expertise and interdisciplinary
inquiry stimulates critical conversations about entrenched and emerging
communicative structures, practices, flows, and struggles. We explore
new ways of understanding and explaining the world, including public
scholarship, algorithmic culture, the arts, artificial intelligence,
multi-modal scholarship, and digital archives. With a core commitment to
the development of early career scholars worldwide, CARGC hosts
postdoctoral, doctoral, undergraduate, and faculty fellows who
collaborate in research groups, author CARGC Press publications, and
organize talks, lectures, symposia, conferences, and summer institutes.
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