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[ecrea] CfP: Special issue on parodying humanitarianism online
Tue Sep 25 23:34:41 GMT 2018
Networking Knowledge – Special Issue
(https://ojs.meccsa.org.uk/index.php/netknow/announcement/view/42)
_Parodying humanitarianism online_
Abstracts of 200 words are invited from early career researchers by
October 20, 2018, for consideration for publication.
This special issue calls for contributions that interrogates the role of
online media parodies in complicating the rhetoric and practices of
everyday humanitarianism.
Broadly, ‘parody’ can be defined as a humorous or a satirical piece that
imitates the style or appearance of another piece of work, or the voice
of its author. In the context of humanitarianism, our concern is with
parodies that appear on online media platforms that provide a harmless
‘critique’ of various representations of humanitarianism, most often,
the poorly contextualised, stereotypical and de-humanising fundraising
and advocacy narratives and imagery, and forms of individual
‘do-gooding’. Examples include, comedian Trevor Noah’s UNICEF fly,
Radi-Aid’s Africa for Norway, and Teju Cole’s piece, ‘The White-Savior
Industrial Complex’. The central question that this special issue asks
is influenced by a debate that Lisa Ann Richey (n.d.)[1]
<https://ojs.meccsa.org.uk/index.php/netknow/announcement/view/42#_ftn1> prompts
readers to, in a discussion on ‘satirizing everyday humanitarianism’:
does such online parodies promote critical thought or add a further
layer of complexity to contemporary humanitarianism’s increasingly
commodified edifice?
This special issue is particularly seeking contributions that examine
how the functions, practices, and ecologies of new media sites enable
such forms of critiques of humanitarianism. We ask how online media
parodies can be situated within theories of humanitarian communication
and mediation, while also attempting to critically explore how the
instantaneous and interactive nature of communications of digital
technologies provides new opportunities and challenges in critiquing
everyday humanitarianism. For example, drawing on Lisa Colletta
(2009)[2]
<https://ojs.meccsa.org.uk/index.php/netknow/announcement/view/42#_ftn2>,
how do online media allow for engagement between the satirist and the
viewer that is fundamental to ensuring the effectiveness of a parody?
Further, influenced by Leah Lievrouw (2011)[3]
<https://ojs.meccsa.org.uk/index.php/netknow/announcement/view/42#_ftn3>,
can parodies be considered as a form of ‘culture jamming’ whose purpose
involves ‘subverting and critiquing’ images and ideas of the mainstream
humanitarianism media culture? Moreover, how do the communicative
ecologies of new media allow for the re-shaping of understandings of the
‘us’ vs ‘them’ relationship, and do parody accounts, aided by new media,
point towards key shifts in the traditional relations of communications
power? We invite articles from across disciplines of media,
communications, and culture, conflict and security, and international
development, and those that offer new and fresh critiques on the
‘critiques’ of humanitarianism.
Within the context of new media, parodies, and humanitarianism, topics
of interest for this special issue include, but are not limited to:
* Theoretical and methodological approaches
* Forms of online media parodies, purposes and practices
* New media ecologies and subversive spaces/techniques
* Strategies of persuasion and ethical considerations
* Parody as breaking stereotypes in humanitarian discourse
* Parody as challenging the traditional ‘us’ vs ‘them’ narrative
* Parody as reaffirming myths in humanitarian discourse
* Pubic engagement with parody
* Parody, right to represent and consent
Abstracts of 200 words are invited from early career researchers by
October 20, 2018, for consideration for publication. Please submit
abstracts to: Madhushala Senaratne ((H.M.Senaratne /at/ sussex.ac.uk)
<mailto:(H.M.Senaratne /at/ sussex.ac.uk)>). Abstracts must also include: name
of author, affiliation, contact details, and 5-6 keywords. We also call
for expressions of interest from early career researchers keen in
serving as assistant editors of the special issue.
[1]
<https://ojs.meccsa.org.uk/index.php/netknow/announcement/view/42#_ftnref1> Richey,
L. A. (n.d.) ‘Humanitarianism’, /I-PEEL - International Political
Economy of Everyday Life/. ,http://i-peel.org/homepage/humanitarianism/
[2]
<https://ojs.meccsa.org.uk/index.php/netknow/announcement/view/42#_ftnref2> Colletta,
L. (2009) ‘Political Satire and Postmodern Irony in the Age of Stephen
Colbert and Jon Stewart’, /The Journal of Popular Culture,/ Vol. 42, No.
5. DOI: 10.1111/j.1540-5931.2009.00711.x
[3]
<https://ojs.meccsa.org.uk/index.php/netknow/announcement/view/42#_ftnref3> Lievrouw,
L. A. (2011) /Alternative and activist new media,/ Cambridge: Polity Press
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