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[Commlist] CFP: Publicity and Transparency - Special Journal Issue
Tue Feb 19 04:01:51 GMT 2019
*PUBLICITY AND TRANSPARENCY*
*Special Issue -- Call for Abstracts*
In the contemporary era of “disrupted” public spheres (Bennett & Pfetsch
2018), “fractured” democracies (Entman & Usher 2018), and “networked”
disinformation (Ong & Cabañes 2018), it is time to rethink some basic
precepts of public communication. This special issue takes up the
challenge posed by these critics and others to rework concepts and
develop methods of research that can adequately account for the habits
and systems of contemporary politics. We focus here on the nexus of
publicity and transparency, two foundational concepts regarding the
proper structure of democratic communication, and solicit work
addressing how these concepts are being reshaped in our moment.
Rather than presuming a necessary symbiosis between transparency and
publicity, we invite proposals for papers that will investigate the
tensions between these concepts as they manifest within actually
existing democracies and through actually existing acts of promotion.
What happens when transparency is appropriated as a promotional tactic?
Are there situations in which transparency and publicity are present and
vigorous, yet together politically ineffectual? How do digital platforms
or interfaces affect the nexus of transparency and publicity in
productive or problematic ways? What types of transparency make
publicity powerful, and vice versa? To address these and similar
questions, we invite contributions to this special issue that examine
the labor of publicity, investigating promotional intermediaries
operating between organizations and publics. Articles may address the
role of promotional work in government, political parties, corporations,
NGOs, loosely-knit online networks, activist collectives, or other civil
sphere groups, but will share an attempt to better understand
transparency and publicity as processes, not just normative standards.
We particularly encourage research attentive to the ways publicity and
transparency are harassed to either challenge or ossify inequalities
across lines of race, gender, class, nationality, or other structuring
identities.
We ask all interested contributors to send a short abstract of their
proposed paper (250-350 words) and a bio (~75 words) to
*(twood12 /at/ fordham.ed)*u by *March 15, 2019*. We are currently in
conversation with a journal about publishing this special issue, and
abstracts will be included in a final proposal to the publisher.
Inquiries regarding the scope, timeline, or details of the proposed
issue can be directed to the same address.
Tim Wood, Fordham University
Melissa Aronczyk, Rutgers University
Works Cited
Bennett, L., & Pfetsch, B. (2018). Rethinking Political Communication in
a Time of Disrupted Public Spheres. Journal of Communication 68, 2 43-253.
Entman, R., & Usher, N. (2018). Framing in a Fractured Democracy.
Journal of Communication 68, 298-308.
Ong, J. C., & Cabañes, J. V. (2017). Architects of Networked
Disinformation: Behind the Scenes of Troll Accounts and Fake News
Production in the Philippines. Newton Tech4Dev Network. University of Leeds.
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