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[ecrea] CFP: #Talkingpoints – Twitter and civic debate, edited volume with Palgrave-Macmillan
Mon Oct 22 11:31:25 GMT 2018
This is a final call for abstracts for this volume, edited by Dr Gwen
Bouvier (Maynooth University, Ireland) and Dr Judith E. Rosenbaum (Maine
University, USA). The CFP deadline is Tue 30 Oct, and abstracts should
be 300-450 words. The volume is under consideration with Palgrave-MacMillan.
With its hashtags, trending topics, and 280-character messages, Twitter
has become the place to watch ideas, movements, and communities develop
and become part of a global consciousness. While some scholars and
social commentators are excited at the increased visibility of groups
and ideas commonly excluded from mainstream discourse, as well as the
possibility of dialogue between groups, others have expressed concern
about the presence of echo chambers and filter bubbles, as well as the
lack of “real” interaction. This raises the question what discussions on
Twitter actually look like. Is there real engagement? What voices are
heard and magnified, and which ones are backgrounded, or missing
altogether? What kinds of conversations unfold on the platform, and do
they contribute to or even qualify as civic debate?
The volume seeks to shed light on the nature of the debates witnessed on
Twitter through a consideration of a multitude of methodological and
theoretical viewpoints. We are seeking contributions from a variety of
backgrounds that consider the various types of conversations on Twitter,
the users who engage in these conversations, and the impact these
conversations have.
We welcome abstracts from across disciplines and methods, although
proposals that present findings based on empirical analysis, including
quantitative, qualitative, ethnographic or political economic, are
preferred. Studies can focus on a range of aspects, from the smaller
details of conversation to trends that point to broader changes and
patterns in use and participation, as well as issues of resistance,
marginalization of voices, off-line/ on-line relations, community
management, patterns in uses of platforms and campaigning and/or activism.
Please send abstracts and a CV to the editors Gwen Bouvier
(gwen.bouvier /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(gwen.bouvier /at/ gmail.com)>and/or Judith E.
(Rosenbaumjudith.rosenbaumandre /at/ maine.edu)
<mailto:(judith.rosenbaumandre /at/ maine.edu)>. The deadline for full chapters
is April 1, 2019. Peer review will take place over May and June, and the
revised chapters will be due September 1, 2019.
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