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[Commlist] Call for Book Chapters (Routledge): Disliking outgroups: overcoming hate speech and polarization in the participatory society
Mon Jun 17 10:30:07 GMT 2019
CALL FOR BOOK CHAPTERS (ROUTLEDGE)
*/Disliking outgroups: overcoming hate speech and polarization in the
participatory society. /*Marta Pérez-Escolar & José Manuel Noguera-Vivo
(eds.)
Abstracts of no more than 250 words can be submitted to
(martaperez /at/ loyola.es) <mailto:(martaperez /at/ loyola.es)> or (jmnoguera /at/ ucam.edu)
<mailto:(jmnoguera /at/ ucam.edu)> until June 31, 2019.
Notifications to authors of abstracts: September 31, 2019
Full book chapter: February 15, 2020 (4,000 - 6,500 words, including
references)
This is not just a book about the utopian and dystopian views of the
internet, but a tool to understand why the participatory society is
still far away of its best aims and possibilities in fields such as
politics, media or cultural industries. In all these cases the tensions
between the great possibilities of participation and the lack of
strategies or resources are offering almost a perfect scenario for the
growth of some hate speeches. From dynamic fields such as media studies,
political communication, new media and journalism, the responses to this
problem can be different but absolutely complementaries. Despite of
previous similar works, such as Brown (2015); Valdesolo & Graham (2016);
Jesuit, Russell & Williams (2017); Itten (2018), Brown & Sinclair (2019)
or Beaufort (2019), among others, this handbook is the first holistic
approach that deals with hate speech, polarization and enclave
deliberation as cross axis that influences digital conversations in
regards to politics, journalism and the anti-fandom phenomenon -fiction,
gaming and cultural industries-.
The myths and realities around the echo chamber effect and the filter
bubble (Pariser, 2017) or the phenomenon of enclave deliberation and its
impact (Sunstein, 2003) are just some of the examples of matters that
need a broader and deeper to understand the media ecosystem and their
challenges. The Routledge Handbook Title comprises the very latest
developments in theories and methods for students and scholar seeking to
understand why it is too hard to fight against hate speech and political
polarization in this media landscape but it is still worthy -and
possible- to try it. Both theoretical approaches as well as empirical
case studies are welcome.
Areas of interest:
- Political and ideological polarization
- Hate speech in the social and mass media
- Toxic fandom universe
The acceptance of the abstract does not guarantee the publication of the
book chapter, which will be under blind peer review.
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