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[ecrea] Self-Representation and representation of Muslim women in digital media and on-screen - Call for papers
Fri Mar 16 07:56:46 GMT 2018
MeCCSA - Race, Ethnicity and Postcolonial Network
Call for Papers
Self-Representation and representation of Muslim women in digital media
and on-screen
Thursday 24th May 2018 - University of East London, Stratford Campus
The Race, Ethnicity and Postcolonial Network invites proposals for a
one-day conference to explore the self-representation and representation
of Muslim women in digital media and on-screen.
From media debate on hijabs in schools, to the recent viral Twitter hashtag, #MosqueMeToo highlight a chasm between society’s perceptions of Muslim women and the lived experience of Muslim women.
In literature, essay collections such as The Things I would Tell You
(Mahfouz, 2017) and the upcoming Sabeena Akhtar anthology, Cut From the
Same Cloth, highlight a rise in the mainstream self-representation of
Muslim women. Indeed, social media platforms such as Instagram and
YouTube are producing a host of influencers, some garnering in excess of
hundreds of thousands of followers worldwide and securing coveted brand
affiliations.
At the same time that self-representation is on the rise with its
attendant problems about speaking for all Muslim women, mainstream
representation is still rolling out the same old tropes. Television
programmes such as My Week as a Muslim (Channel 4, 2017) have been
accused of cultural insensitivity, and others such as Extremely British
Muslims (Channel 4, 2017) and The Truth About Muslim Marriage (Channel
4, 2017) have evoked mixed reactions in terms of the intention behind
the shows versus the resulting effect on the collective social
imagination. In wider society, Tell Mama’s most recent annual report
highlighted that the greatest impact of anti-Muslim violence continues
to be directed towards visible Muslim women (Tell Mama, 2017).
Proposals for 15-minute papers or presentations are invited which focus
on representation and self-representation of Muslim women in, but are
not limited to, the following areas:
- The representation of Muslim women across media platforms and the press
- Social media self-representation platforms - Representation in film
and television (Britain, Hollywood and beyond)
- Social media brand affiliations - Social impact of self-/representation
We welcome proposals from independent researchers, archivists,
postgraduate students, academics, and broadcast professionals. We are
happy to receive papers submitted together, but reserve the right to
organise panels as we think best. Please use the following format for
proposals, on one side of an A4 document:
• Name, contact details.
• Title of paper or presentation
• 250-word summary or abstract
• 100-word biography
Send proposals as a Word doc or PDF attachment by email to:
Gurvinder Aujla-Sidhu, (gaujla-sidhu /at/ dmu.ac.uk)
Naida Redgrave, (n.redgrave /at/ uel.ac.uk)
Deadline: April 20th 2018
Details of Keynote Speakers and ticketing information will be published
in due course.
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