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[Commlist] Call for Papers: Liberalism Inc - 200 Years of the Guardian
Sat Aug 03 09:53:17 GMT 2019
_Initial Conference Call for Papers_
*Liberalism Inc. - 200 years of the Guardian*
Goldsmiths, University of London, Saturday 9 May, 2020
Keynote speakers: Priya Gopal (author of /Insurgent Empire: Anticolonial
Resistance and British Dissent/) and Alan Rusbridger (author of
/Breaking News /and former editor-in-chief of the Guardian)
In May 2021, the Guardian turns 200. From its inception in Manchester in
1821 as a response to the murder of ordinary people by soldiers in the
1819 Peterloo Massacre to its historic identification with centre-left
politics, the Guardian has long been a key institution in the definition
and development of liberalism. The stereotype of the ‘Guardianista’, an
environmentally conscious, Labour-voting, progressively minded public
sector worker remains part of the popular mythology of British press
history.
Yet the title has a complex lineage.
The Guardian advocated the abolition of slavery in the US, criticised
the Boer War, backed women’s suffrage and supported the Republican cause
in the Spanish civil war; it has published some of the most celebrated
examples of investigative journalism – from the breaking of the phone
hacking scandal to Edward Snowden’s revelations of US and UK
surveillance programmes.
Yet it owes its existence to a cotton merchant determined to head off
more radical ideas at the start of the Industrial Revolution; it opposed
direct action by the suffragette movement; has at various times called
for a vote for the Conservatives, Social Democrats and Liberal
Democrats; supported the First Gulf War and the NATO bombing of
Yugoslavia; and has been accused more recently of consistently
denigrating Jeremy Corbyn’s leadership of the Labour Party. It has both
fiercely defended the need for fearless, independent journalism and
handed over documents and hard drives to the authorities; it has carved
out a niche for itself in the UK press market as a progressive voice but
has also consistently diminished more radical projects to the left.
Its business model is equally distinctive. It has been owned by the
Scott Trust since 1936 and has been partially protected from the
proprietorial interference that its counterparts have always faced; it
has led the way in innovative design and formats and it now champions a
membership model with some one million people signed up to the scheme.
Its forthcoming anniversary provides an opportunity for academics,
researchers, historians and journalists to assess the contribution of
the Guardian to British politics, society and culture through a major
conference. We are looking for a range of contributions from more
theoretical reflections on its foundational principles to empirical
assessments of specific features of its coverage. In particular, we are
looking for papers on:
·Historical and theoretical accounts of liberalism
·Issues of balance, bias and sourcing in Guardian journalism
·Press power, partisanship and propaganda
·The history of the Guardian with an emphasis on its founding in 1821
·Its party political affiliations and election endorsements
·Its reporting of women’s liberation and gender issues
·Its coverage of race and empire
·Foreign reporting with a particular interest in its coverage of UK
military interventions
·Its reporting of Israel and Palestine
·Its business model: critiques of Trust ownership, Guardian membership
and international expansion
·Its commitment to investigative journalism
·Newsroom culture and internal democracy
·The shift from ‘hard news’ to comment and opinion
·Philanthropic funding and branded content
·The Guardian, surveillance and national security
Selected papers will be invited to submit to an edited collection to be
published in 2021 ahead of the Guardian’s anniversary.
The conference is organised by the Goldsmiths Leverhulme Media Research
Centre and will be held in the Professor Stuart Hall building at
Goldsmiths, University of London in New Cross, South East London on
Saturday 9 May 2020.
Please send your abstract of approximately 300 words to
(goldsmithsleverhulmecentre /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(goldsmithsleverhulmecentre /at/ gmail.com)>. We will also consider
panel proposals.
Deadline: 30 September 2019.
For more information, contact the conference organisers Des Freedman
((d.freedman /at/ gold.ac.uk)) and Becky Gardiner ((b.gardiner /at/ gold.ac.uk))
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