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[Commlist] cfp: ECREA Communication History Section Workshop
Fri May 03 23:13:19 GMT 2019
Call for Papers
ECREA Communication History Section Workshop Vienna, 11-13 September 2019
Austrian Academy of Sciences
Jeopardizing Democracy throughout History: Media as Accomplice,
Adversary or Amplifier of Populist and Radical Politics
Populism appears to be on the rise for several years now and extreme
ideologies as well as radical politics strive for power in many European
democracies and around the globe. Public debate and political pundits
suggest that there is a link between the proliferation of radical
politics, trenches of polarization between political camps and across
societies on the one side and contemporary media environments on the
other. The emphasis on allegedly new phenomena such as fake news, echo
chambers, hate speech or digital platforms as drivers of political
polarization and as vessels of agitation, often neglects that mediated
communication has always played a vital role in both safeguarding
democracy as well as putting it in jeopardy.
For this workshop, the ECREA Communication History Section invites
scholarly presentations to shed light on political communication that
fosters populist and radical politics in a historical perspective and
across various political and cultural settings in Europe and beyond, to
learn from the past for contemporary challenges.
The goal is to understand the role media played as potential accomplices
or carriers of populist agitation (e.g. in autocratic regimes or out of
commercial premises), and as amplifiers of extreme political positions
or groups and populist sentiment (e.g. sensationalist and simplistic
reporting or excessive coverage for populist tropes). Media and mediated
communication can however also act as countering forces and adversaries
of radical politics and aim to tame blatant populism or maintain forums
for civilized debate. The workshop is also interested in works that help
to deconstruct or re-evaluate assumptions about counter publics,
alternative media, both for democratically progressive or rather
revisionist and reactionary goals, and it aims to assemble a broad
portfolio of perspectives on the topic covering a variety of historical
periods, national or supranational settings and media involved. We are
interested in research that addresses the full scope of media history
from early prints to the digital age.
More specifically, this ECREA Communication History Section Workshop
will be open to papers dealing with:
- Populist communication strategies over time, spreading mistrust
against social, cultural or political elites. We are interested in
studies of how this played out in various settings and what
communicative strategies were employed by populists from different
political camps and for various ends. The anti-elite stance of populist
rhetoric includes antagonizing legacy media and the institution of
journalism, to discredit information and critical coverage. How was “the
press” or were “the media” but also “science” antagonized by populists,
and how did in the contrary media portray their own role as an antidote
against populism and as guardians of democracy? Did the media contribute
to the rise of populism by providing a forum for populist actors or
being advocates on behalf of the people, with a critical attitude toward
power holders and building on the same principles as populist
communication? And for what reasons (power, influence, profit, ideology...)?
- Rumours, myths, lies and conspiracy theories. All of them have a long
history of being used as a pretence to spark public outrage, or moral
panic, to motivate uprisings or isolate social groups as scapegoats or
fall guys for political gain. The workshop is interested in popular
myths, catastrophic rumours and allegations as means of political
controversy and the strategies and logics of fear mongering.
- Simplistic answers for complex problems. Typically, populist rhetoric
is anti-elite and advocating for an ingroup (us) which would be
threatened or abused by the elites or a perilous outgroup (them). We are
interested in research, highlighting the historical dimension of
propaganda against vulnerable social groups, minorities, foreigners,
socially weak, handicapped, anti-Semitic or misogynist agitation.
- Persistence and discontinuities in how alternative media reached out
and aimed to mobilize, inform or counteract public communication. In how
far were the public observation and valuation favourable to such
endeavours and when was it critical? How do the features and affordances
of certain media support populist agitation, and can populism be linked
to specific media ensembles?
- Political extremism and mainstream politics. What is considered a
“radical” position is not an absolute but relative and transient. The
workshop will thus welcome contributions which address the construction
of mainstreams, centres, peripheries and extremes in political debate,
public discourse or academic analysis, and how these categories were
used to isolate certain positions and how the boundaries of public
debate have shifted over time.
- Media governance and democracy. How were media considered responsible
for the preservation and defense of democracy in different historical
periods and geographies? How did governance institutions and regulatory
bodies address issues of media freedom, and how did authorities act
against radical agitation or mute legitimate public critic?
- Theoretical reflections on how current theoretical and methodological
approaches be transferred to past scenarios. Is the research into
populism antagonizing legitimate political voices and critique and
contributing to political hegemony by how research approaches subversive
forces? How do and did media and communication scholars normalize some
communication practices and pathologize others? Which myths and
narratives are cultivated by media research, and how do prevalent
concepts, eligible methods and accessible sources shape and foster
certain understandings of problematic populism or romanticized counter-
publics and civic engagement?
Abstracts of 500 words proposing empirical case studies as well as
theoretical or methodological contributions should be submitted no later
than 15 May 2019. Proposals for full panels (comprising 4 or 5 papers)
are also welcome: these should include a 250-word abstract for each
individual presentation, and a 300-word rationale for the panel. Send
abstracts to: (cohecrea2019 /at/ yahoo.com) <mailto:(cohecrea2019 /at/ yahoo.com)>.
Authors will be informed regarding acceptance/rejection for the
conference no later than 15 June 2019. Early career scholars and
graduate students are highly encouraged to submit their work. Please
indicate if the research submitted is part of your thesis or
dissertation project. The organizers will aim to arrange for discussants
to provide an intensive response for graduate students projects.
The conference registration fee will be 150 euros (110 euros Ph.D. and
M.A. students) and participants will be asked to cover their own travel
expenses. This fee includes two lunches and one conference dinner.
page2image519815056
For more information on the workshop please visit:
https://www.oeaw.ac.at/cmc/detail/event/ecrea-communication-history-section-workshop-
2019/
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