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[Commlist] CFP: Disertaciones: The challenges of narrative journalism
Thu Apr 25 20:54:45 GMT 2019
CFP Disertaciones, anuario electrónico de estudios en Comunicación Social
The challenges of narrative journalism
Guest editors:
• Adriana Amado Suárez (UADE, Universidad Argentina de la Empresa)
• Francisco Seoane Pérez (Universidad Carlos III de Madrid, Spain)
Deadline for submissions: 30 November 2019
CFP text available in English, Spanish and Portuguese:
https://revistas.urosario.edu.co/index.php/disertaciones/announcement/view/132
"Long breath" journalism is as old as journalism itself. In Latin
America it has its roots in brochures full of social and political
criticism such as Periquillo Sarniento by Lizardi or Facundo by Faustino
Sarmiento. In North America, literary and investigative journalism go
hand in hand, with the muckrakers anticipating the New Journalism coined
by Wolfe in the 60s and 70s of the 20th century. In Europe,
interestingly, the development of narrative journalism is linked to
colonialism, with figures such as Albert Londres, George Orwell and
Ryszard Kapuścińsk acting as uncomfortable correspondents of their
respective metropolises.
Although narrative journalism has been considered the epitome of good
journalism, revealing hidden realities through expressive precision and
the aesthetic joy of good writing, its closeness to literature has led
some authors to engage in pure invention, breaking the pact of
truthfulness with the reader through credible fiction. The cases abound,
from the recent Claas Relotius scandal in Der Spiegel, to the falsehoods
and plagiarism of Jason Blair for the New York Times at the beginning of
this century, by way of the historical farces of Janet Cooke (who had to
return a Pulitzer Prize because of a story invented for the Washington
Post in 1980), the fictitious interviews of Nahuel Maciel for El
Cronista in the early 90s, or the fakes of Stephen Glass for The New
Republic in the late 1990s, which were turned into a Hollywood film in 2003.
More recently, narrative journalism has been accused of being prone to
act as a conduct of hoaxes, or of what we might contemporary understand
as 'fake news'. In the wake of the scandal caused by a feature by
Rolling Stone on a gang rape at the University of Virginia, which did
not properly check the statements of the alleged victim, New York
University professor Jay Rosen placed the origin of the error in a
practice that he considers usual in magazine journalism: to settle on a
narrative (in this case, the impunity of campus rape) and then look for
supporting stories, instead of the other way around.
The digital revolution in journalism also presents another dilemma for
literary journalism. Have not journals of extended periodicity been the
best supports of a journalism that demands extra attention on the part
of the reader? Can long journalism survive in the age of tweets and
clickbait?
In this call for papers, the academic journal Disertaciones seeks
original articles on the challenges of narrative journalism. To wit:
- The boundaries between non-fiction and fiction, and their ethical
consequences
- The survival of narrative journalism in the digital era
- Multimedia storytelling as a development of literary journalism
- Relations with ethnography and social anthropology
- The political function of narrative journalism, its ability to
influence social and political change
- The star themes in literary journalism: its concern for marginality
- Past and future of narrative genres: profiles and features
- The great authors of narrative journalism, and the undeservedly unknown
- Publication outlets: the book as a dissemination platform
- Financing narrative projects: philanthropy and crowd-funding
- Literary journalism beyond the text: sound and image (including
comic-books and animation)
- The relationship between narrative and investigative journalism
- Narrative journalism and online social networks: new ways of telling
stories?
- How to name the journalism that tells: narrative, literary, long-form…
Narrative journalism, of deep historical roots in Latin America, is
alive and well thanks to figures like Leila Guerriero, Martín Caparrós
and Alma Guillermoprieto. However, despite the existence of associations
such as the International Association for Literary Journalism Studies,
narrative journalism has received little attention from academics. This
special issue of Disertaciones wants to awake among communication
scholars the interest that literary journalism deserves, by encouraging
research on the challenges it must face in this digital age.
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