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[ecrea] Populism and the Media Across Europe - CFP
Mon Aug 06 09:45:42 GMT 2018
CALL FOR PAPERS
Special Issue of the Central European Journal of Communication
"Populism and the Media Across Europe"
Deadline for full-length paper submission: September 30, 2018
The Special Issue will be published in Spring 2019.
Link to the call:
https://www.cejc.ptks.pl/News/CALL-FOR-PAPERS--SPECIAL-ISSUE-ON-POPULISM-AND-THE-MEDIA-ACROSS-EUROPE
**Description**
The recent electoral success of populist actors across Europe has been
accompanied by an increased interest in the varied facets of the
phenomenon of "populism" and, more recently, its relationship with the
media. While much attention has been paid to populist parties and
political leaders, their link to the media was less in the focus. The
success of populist parties has resulted in publications seeking to
determine and to understand the characteristics of populist political
actors and their views on the one hand, and how voters respond to them
on the other. Nevertheless, analyzing the relationships between populist
political actors, the media (journalists) and society (voters) is a key
to explain the success of populist parties and populist discourse in
general.
Adopting the perspective of political communication in populism studies
makes it possible to focus not only on ideology, but also on how it is
packaged into messages, and the role that different media play in
disseminating them. In fact, there is a complex relationship between
populist actors and the media. On the one hand, populist parties are
said to be dependent on the media for communication and they heavily
feed on public attention through various forms of publicity. On the
other hand, populist actors are eager to contest the traditional media,
considering them as the appanage of the establishment. However, their
maneuvering space has been widened thanks to a more and more
sophisticated use of social media channels. The proliferation of social
media has provided new space for political communication, where populist
actors exercise their voice and interact with citizens who are no longer
just receivers of the populist messages, but also active participants in
the communication process. Insofar as populist parties usually contest
the narratives of established political actors, social media may provide
them with a welcome opportunity to avoid journalistic framing and
contextualization. But to what extent populist parties communicate
through and past traditional media, and with what effect, is still
under-researched.
**Scope**
For this special issue we invite submissions that explore relations
between populist actors, media and citizens. Particularly, we seek
papers addressing the following questions: What role does the
traditional and online/social media play in spreading populist messages?
How do journalists perceive and approach populist actors? How much
attention does the media pay to populist political actors and messages?
What strategies do populist actors use to gain media attention? What are
the political and social consequences of mediatization of populist
political communication? What are the effects of populist messages on
their audiences, in particular public sentiment towards controversial
issues, and the vote? The Call for Papers welcomes papers focusing on
one or more of these aspects. Comparative approaches are highly welcome.
**Submission**
We ask scholars and researchers interested in this topic to submit
original manuscripts no longer than 45,000 characters (notes and
reference list included).
Full-length papers shall be submitted online:
https://www.cejc.ptks.pl/Submission-of-article or directly to
(agnieszka.stepinska /at/ amu.edu.pl) <mailto:(agnieszka.stepinska /at/ amu.edu.pl)>
following "The Central European Journal of Communication" Style and
Manuscript Guidelines: https://www.cejc.ptks.pl/Guidelines
All submissions will go through the process of double blind review. For
further information please contact: (agnieszka.stepinska /at/ amu.edu.pl)
<mailto:(agnieszka.stepinska /at/ amu.edu.pl)>
**About CEJC**
Central European Journal of Communication is published twice a year (in
Spring and Fall) on behalf of the Polish Communication Association. The
Journal welcomes contributions examining the role of communication from
all theoretical, empirical and critical perspectives and using all forms
of inquiry, as well as shorter research notes and commentaries, together
with scholarly reviews of books and other scientific publications. The
Journal is indexed and abstracted in several scientific databases, such
as Scopus, Web of Science, The Central and Eastern European Online
Library, Index Copernicus International and the Central European Journal
of Social Sciences and Humanities. Website: https://www.cejc.ptks.pl/
Agnieszka Stępińska (editor)
Nikoleta Corbu (Guest editor)
Peter Maurer (Guest editor)
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