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[ecrea] CFP: Mediated recognition: Identity, justice and activism (ICA pre-conference)
Mon Nov 12 23:48:30 GMT 2018
Call for ICA 2019 Pre-Conference
Mediated Recognition: Identity, Justice and Activism
Event date: 24 May 2019, 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM, Washington D.C., USA
Venue: Main Conference Hotel
Deadline for proposals: 10 January 2018 (300-500 words abstract)
Organizers: Olivier Driessens (University of Copenhagen) and Torgeir
Uberg Nærland (University of Bergen)
Recognition plays a crucial role in cross-boundary identity formation of
individuals and groups and it is a central feature in social struggles.
Charles Taylor's (1994) politics of recognition explains recognition's
role in multiculturalism and cultural diversity, whereas Axel Honneth
(1995) stresses the need of mutual recognition for self-actualisation,
while providing an important alternative for Marxist analyses of social
struggle by stressing the role of respect and esteem instead of class
conflict. Taylor and Honneth agree that liberal politics of equal rights
are insufficient for a just society and that justice requires social
solidarity that includes recognition of every individual's contribution
to society (McBride 2013).
What their social theories overlook though is the role of media,
technology and communication in crossing the boundaries between social
and cultural groups, in the constitution and change of recognition and
in the pursuit of social justice. Consequently, this pre-conference has
two central aims: (1) to update social theories of recognition by
acknowledging its mediated nature; (2) to advance post-disciplinary
debates on the role of media, technology and communication in the
politics of and struggles for recognition. As such, the pre-conference
will contribute to a better understanding of processes of identity
formation, social conflict, (mis)representation, social justice,
media(ted) activism and politics. It will address these issues by
bringing together a multi-disciplinary group of scholars.
We welcome theoretical and/or empirical contributions on questions
including:
a) mediated recognition: How does a social theory of mediated
recognition look like? To what extent do media, technology and
communication alter the conditions for recognition and social justice?
b) identity and representation: Building on important work on
recognition and the media by Cottle (2007) and Maia (2014), further work
on media as sites of struggle is necessary. How can individuals and
groups gain agency in mediated recognition processes? In what ways can
activist or community media influence the recognition of marginalised,
minority or discriminated groups across boundaries? How does mediated
recognition fuel or intersect with politics?
c) datafication of recognition: What are the consequences for
individuals, groups and their social fields when esteem is increasingly
metricised and datafied, such as in Uber ratings or the Chinese Social
Credit? What do cross-national or -cultural comparative analyses teach
us about the (dis)similarities of data-related recognition struggles?
d) social justice: How do recognition theories shed new light on
questions of media- and data-related misrecognition, non-recognition or
injustice? How are social movements responding to inequalities and
(feelings of) injustice rooted in mediated and datafied misrecognition?
Responses to the contributions will be given by Tanja Thomas (University
of Tuebingen), Peter Lunt (University of Leicester), Maia Rousiley
(Federal University of Minas Gerais) and Tanja Dreher (University of New
South Wales).
Please email a 300-500 words proposal to Torgeir Uberg Nærland
((torgeir.narland /at/ uib.no)) by January 10, 2018.
Authors will be notified of their acceptance before January 31, 2018.
Please direct any questions to: Olivier Driessens ((olivier /at/ hum.ku.dk)) or
Torgeir Uberg Nærland ((torgeir.narland /at/ uib.no))
The preconference is sponsored by the Philosophy, Theory and Critique
Division and the Activism, Communication and Social Justice Interest
Group (represented by Anne Kaun and Guobin Yang).
The preconference is financially supported by University of Bergen and
University of Copenhagen.
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