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[Commlist] CFP: Narrative Journalism and Socialism
Tue Jul 02 00:26:50 GMT 2019
Call for Papers Narrative Journalism and Socialism:
From Marxism to the New Lefts, in Action and Stories
Sur le journalisme | About Journalism | Sobre jornalismo
Editors of this special issue: Pablo Calvi (Stony Brook University, NY,
United States), William Dow (American University of Paris, Université
Paris-Est Marne-la-Vallée, France), Roberto Herrscher (Universidad
Alberto Hurtado, Santiago, Chile), Isabelle Meuret (Université libre de
Bruxelles, Belgium) & Isabel Soares (Universidade de Lisboa, Portugal).
From Jack London to George Orwell, from Upton Sinclair to Gabriel
García Márquez, from José Martí to Elena Poniatowska, from Joseph
Roth to Günter Walraff, literary journalists have often pursued a
socialist agenda. Undercover reporters, muckrakers and, increasingly,
whistleblowers share a common dedication and commitment to social
justice and progress. Because it explores the extraordinary lives of
ordinary people, narrative or literary journalism falls within the
traditions of History from Below (United Kingdom), Alltagsgeschichte
(Germany), or microstoria (Italy) of the past century, all of which have
a staunch socialist or Marxist allegiance. Poverty, precarity,
unemployment, displacement, imprisonment, malady, i.e. the many plagues
that affect the downtrodden, feature as essential topics in
Anglo-American literary journalism, French grand reportage, and
Hispano-Portuguese crónicas. By way of illustration, Ted Conover
follows Mexican migrants crossing the border to the United States,
Adrienne Nicole Leblanc reports on a Puerto Rican family in the Bronx
drug underworld, William T. Vollmann investigates poverty across the
world, while in France, Florence Aubenas tells the stories of precarious
workers and dropouts, and in Portugal Mário and Pedro Patrocínio tell
of lives in Brazilian favelas and Angolan urban ghettoes. With the rise
of populisms and right extremisms, movements from the left, far-left,
and even beyond the left side of the political spectrum, have also
gained in visibility. Socialism today, drawing either from its Marxist
heritage or as a legacy of a pluralist Left, takes different directions,
including radicalization or direct action. Grass-roots movement are
thriving, whether they originate from the political sphere or civil
society. The dramatic comeback of socialism is also characterized by the
popularity of some politicians who totally assume this new turn to the
left, from Bernie Sanders in the United States to Jeremy Corbyn in the
United Kingdom. The nature of this socialism is not homogeneous; it
comes in a variety of forms. Growing inequalities between elites and
citizens, big bosses and minimum wage earners, and the shameless
exploitation of vulnerable populations, cause considerable discontent on
a worldwide scale. A global conversation allows for new ideas to emerge
on the management and action levels, and “conscientization” (Paulo
Freire) remains an important key to understand the prevailing climate,
to untangle problems, to imagine viable solutions or even pedagogical
projects. However, if radical imagination and direct action are
undeniably back in favor, socialism does not necessarily mean radicalism
or anarchism, nor Marxism, nor communism. Movements for social justice
have always been supported and performed through storytelling. This
issue of About Journalism will interrogate the specificities of such
stories, which prompt and convey meaning to action, in a diachronic
perspective. It will highlight the roots, convergences and divergences,
but also the prospects for socialism in the twenty-first century, as
well as the manner in which it is revisited and modernized by future
generations. It will aim at understanding how narrative journalism, or
literary reportage, allows for a better understanding of the stakes,
promises, and values of socialism today, in a transcultural and
interdisciplinary perspective. This issue will deal with the main
motivations and subjects of socialism, now that it is actively
resisting, and will define the journalistic and literary practices and
strategies used to reflect such realities. It will analyze the poetics,
poietics, and politics of narrative journalism when it specifically
reports on the people from below, those whom we have come to call the
new poor, the underprivileged, or poorly-paid workers. From a purely
journalistic point of view, it is a fact that the political press is
losing momentum and is being supplanted by pluralistic and nonpartisan
media. Therefore, it is worth considering the vacuum left by many
newspapers that explicitly assumed their left-wing alignment, be it
simply socialist, progressive, or else, not to mention those who are
still, strictly speaking, the official organs of a party – Le Peuple in
Belgium, L’Humanité in France, Pravda in the Soviet Union, People’s
Daily in China – to name just a few. This void is now filled by
editorialists and polemicists of all kinds who are providing opinions
and commentaries, while social networks offer space to vent off anger,
hatred, and abuse. Conversely, literary journalists propose an
alternative path where long-researched and well-crafted stories disclose
the details of felt lives and reveal the humanness of complicated realities.
Papers for this special issue of the journal will reflect the variety of
definitions, conceptualizations, representations, and interpretations of
socialism, along the following lines: • - Activism, radicalism, direct
action, journalism • - Ethics and aesthetics of literary/narrative
journalism • - Literary/Narrative journalism and social justice • -
Literary/Narrative journalism in immersion • - Politically committed
journalism, journalism of attachment • - Active literature and positive
journalism • - Militant and pedagogical practices through the media • -
Representations of struggles and revolutions in media productions
***
The deadline for submitting the final manuscripts (30 to 50,000
characters, including notes and bibliography) is 1st December 2019, at:
(Isabelle.Meuret /at/ ulb.ac.be) Manuscripts may be written in English, French,
Portuguese or Spanish. Double blind review.
https://surlejournalisme.com/?p=4123
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