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[Commlist] cfp edited book: Revisiting ethnic media in Canada: Policies, practices, and integration
Thu Aug 08 12:13:11 GMT 2019
CALL FOR PAPERS FOR EDITED VOLUME
Revisiting ethnic media in Canada: Policies, practices, and integration
Daniel Ahadi, Sherry S. Yu, and Ahmed Al-Rawi
Ethnic media research has been active in Canada in the past few decades
(see for example, Ahmed, 2015; Black & Leithner, 1988; Hirji, 2010;
Karim, 2003; Yu, 2018; BC Ethnic Media Study [Murray, Yu, & Ahadi,
2007]; Ottawa Multicultural Media Initiative [Ahmed, 2011-2016]).
Studies have found that ethnic media play various functions, including
preserving the culture of their respective communities, uniting and
strengthening the sense of community, providing an alternative voice,
and offering basic information that is vital to settlement and civic
engagement.
Building on this body of literature, more in-depth investigation is
timely, considering not only the increasingly complicated layers of
identity and belonging along lines of ethnicity, race, gender, religion,
language, nationality, and citizenship, among other traits, but also the
subsequent challenges of the reciprocal or two-way integration of
majority and minority populations in Canada. More importantly, there is
no comprehensive collection of ethnic media research with a specific
focus on Canada.
This book attempts to explore theories, methodologies, policies, and
practices concerning ethnic media, and to offer insights on the nature
of ethnic media production and consumption and related implications.
Specifically, the focus is on how journalists, media practitioners,
industry stakeholders, and audiences in Canada engage with ethnic media,
and what this media sector means for socio-cultural, economic, and
political integration, or lack thereof.
Generally, the debates surrounding ethnic media fall within two broader
streams. The integrative stream acknowledges ethnic media’s role in
helping the integration of minority groups into the mainstream culture,
and fostering ethnic cohesion and cultural maintenance, through their
symbolic function as mediators of identities and their connective
function as mediators of information. These media also enhance the
public sphere in their role of encouraging debate on different issues
that are relevant to ethnic groups. On the other hand, the
non-integrative stream expresses concerns about ethnic media’s divisive
role as they can alienate minority groups from the mainstream culture.
Increasingly, there is recognition of ethnic media’s complementary role
to mainstream media, reflecting the convergence culture in what Sreberny
calls “not only, but also” (2005). In other words, ethnic media provide
an alternative perspective to what is already covered in mainstream
media. In this regard, ethnic journalism is seen to be capable of
altering the hierarchy of access to news by focusing on ethnic groups
rather than those who have historically been in position of privilege
and power. This is achieved in the way that the different media
platforms provide an outlet for self-representation, to voice concerns
and highlight the important issues relevant to specific minority groups.
These streams of thought, however, confirm the conventional notion of
ethnic media as media by and for ethnic minorities. This book challenges
the conceptual boundary of ethnic media and invites scholars to revisit
ethnic media from critical perspectives. For example, theoretically, is
the term “ethnic media” appropriate? Methodologically, what are the
challenges and innovative approaches that need to be considered when
studying ethnic media, especially in the digital age?
More research is also needed on the historical account of ethnic media,
and the role of policies, regulations, and industry codes in ethnic
media journalism. Ethnic media date back to the 1800s in Canada;
however, their significance in Canadian journalism is often
underestimated. Similarly, the Ethnic Broadcasting Policy stipulates
what ethnic broadcasting should provide; however, does it or do any
other media policies properly address the actual needs of ethnic media
production and consumption on the ground?
More research is also needed on the role of ethnic media in
intercultural communication. Ethnic media tend to be studied in
isolation as media for ethnic communities, with less attention to their
integrative role as multi-cultural, -ethnic, and -lingual information
hubs that inform members of broader society about these communities.
Related to this area of research is the growing digital spaces created
by younger generations whose in-betweenness or hyphenated identities not
only find ways to establish communicative spaces for those of similar
backgrounds, but also enable them to reach out to a broader audience.
This book intends to fill these gaps in ethnic media research in Canada.
The editors of this book have experience in ethnic media research
internationally, North America and Europe. By ethnic group, the editors
also have published research on Iranian, Korean, and Arab
Canadian/American media (see the editors’ bios below). Based on our
collective experience in ethnic media research, we now turn to Canada
and its diverse ethnic media landscape. We welcome theoretical and
empirical contributions (qualitative or quantitative), case studies, and
policy papers, from various disciplines that explore the areas listed
below though not only limited to them:
• Critical approaches to theories of media and diversity (e.g.,
de-westernization, post- colonial theory)
• Critical approaches to methodologies of ethnic media research
• Historical perspectives on ethnic media
• Media policies towards ethnic media
• Ethnic media, politics, citizenship, and civic engagement
• Ethnic media and identity politics
• Ethnic media and intercultural communication
• Ethnic media and Indigenous media
• Ethnic media as alternative media
• Market and the political economy of ethnic media
• New media technologies and emerging sites of ethnic media (e.g.,
mobile apps, digital platforms, social media, video games, online dating
sites)
• Feminism, women, and ethnic media
• Youth and communicative spaces
• Tensions between transnational (global) and ethnic (local) media, in
terms of content and impact
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Deadline for abstract: Please indicate interest by submitting a
300-500-word abstract and brief bios as a PDF attachment directly to
Daniel Ahadi ((daniel_ahadi /at/ sfu.ca) <mailto:(daniel_ahadi /at/ sfu.ca)>) by
October 15, 2019
Decision: December 15, 2019
Deadline for full paper: May 1, 2020
Publication: Fall 2021
A few words about the Editors:
Daniel Ahadi (PhD, Simon Fraser University, School of Communication) is
a Lecturer in the School of Communication and a Research Associate at
the Centre for Policy Studies on Culture and Communities at Simon Fraser
University, Canada. His research focuses on the development of self and
identity within the context of media, migration, globalization, and
formation of transnational diasporas. His most recent publications
include, “Disrupting the digital: Persian- language community radio in
Stockholm and the continued relevance of analogue media in a digital
age,” in Ethnic Media in the Digital Age (2019, Routledge) and “Ethnic
Media and Acculturation,” in International Encyclopedia of Intercultural
Communication (2018, Wiley).
Sherry S. Yu (PhD, Simon Fraser University, School of Communication) is
an Assistant Professor in the Department of Arts, Culture and Media and
the Faculty of Information at the University of Toronto, Canada. Her
research explores multiculturalism, media, and social integration, with
a special interest in diasporic media in relation to cultural literacy,
intercultural dialogue, and civic engagement in a multicultural society.
She is the author of Diasporic Media beyond the Diaspora: Korean Media
in Vancouver and Los Angeles (2018, UBC Press) and the co-editor of
Ethnic Media in the Digital Age (2019, Routledge). Her research also has
been published in scholarly journals such as Journalism: Theory,
Practice & Criticism, Journalism Studies, Journal of Ethnic and
Migration Studies, Canadian Ethnic Studies, Canadian Journal of
Communication, and Global Media Journal — Canadian Edition.
Ahmed Al-Rawi (PhD, University of Leicester, School of Media,
Communication, & Sociology) is an Assistant Professor of Social Media,
News, and Public Communication in the School of Communication at Simon
Fraser University, Canada. His research expertise is related to global
communication, news, social media, and the Middle East with emphasis on
critical theory. He authored three books and over fifty peer reviewed
book chapters and articles published in journals like Information,
Communication & Society, Social Media+Society, and Journalism. Al-Rawi
co-edited a book with Karim Karim entitled Media and Diaspora in Europe:
Migration, Identity, and Integration (2018, Springer/Palgrave Macmillan)
that examined the experiences of different migrant groups in Europe and
their media use.
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