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[Commlist] CFP: Congress Médias 19 - Numapresse (the old press and the new press in the digital age)
Fri Oct 25 16:49:55 GMT 2019
* Call for papers: Congress Médias 19 - Numapresse (the old press and
the new press in the digital age) *
Also available at
http://www.numapresse.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Appel-a%CC%80-contribution-congre%CC%80s-Me%CC%81dias-19-Numapresse.pdf
***
International symposium, Paris, Canadia Cultural Centre and at the
French National Library (BNF), June 8 -11, 2020
***
After a first congress held in June, 2015, Médias 19 and Numapresse are
organizing a second large meeting that will take place in Paris, from
June 8 to 11, 2020, and that aspires to map the current state of
research on the press in the age of the digitization of corpora.
The franco-quebecois scientific project Médias 19, centered around the
digital platform www.medias19.org <http://www.medias19.org>, has,
since 2011, been the development framework of a reflection on
the journalistic practices of the 19th century, the valorization
and analysis of corpora, as well as studies on the development of the
media culture in the francophone space. Since 2017, the international
scientific project Numapresse, financed by the French National Agency
for Research (www.numapresse.org <http://www.numapresse.org>), aims to
propose a new cultural and literary history of the French press from the
19th century to the present day, by mobilizing the large corpora
of digitized news and new text and data mining tools.
This congress, organized by Guillaume Pinson (Université Laval) and
Marie-Ève Thérenty (Paul Valéry University of Montpellier III)
provides an opportunity to invite researchers to map the current state
of research. It will consist of four workdays and is based on the main
themes that have, during the last few years, been at the heart of
historical and literary research on the press.
The congress will take place in Paris at the Canadia Cultural Centre and
at the French National Library (BNF). Presentations should be around 20
minutes. Proposals in French or English (250 words, a succinct CV,
complete contact details and mention of the institution that you
are attached to) should be sent by e-mail to the following address,
before December 1st, 2019: (congresM19Numapresse /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(congresM19Numapresse /at/ gmail.com)>.
Researchers interested in submitting a proposal should know that, for
all the themes of the congress, transversal and general studies are
preferred to subjects that are purely monographic. In addition, all
proposals that do not pertain to one of these axes will also
be examined. The congress will result in a publication.
1: Viralities and circulations _(_Committee member in charge of this
topic : Guillaume Pinson)
The vogue of world history and cultural transfers, linked to massive
campaigns of press digitization, have, during the past few years, opened
the way for decompartmentalized studies of media corpora. These will be
considered in their capacity to exchange texts and to reunite reader
communities from geographical zones that are partly very dense (within
big media metropolises), and partly diffusely populated (Europe-American
Atlantic axes, or even colonial communications, for instance). Moreover,
digital tools have opened the way for circulation and “virality” studies
(Cordell) that have nothing in common with the usual reading modes
and painstaking analysis. This way, one can automatically retrieve the
widespread practices of reprinting articles, some of which being of
considerable intensity and space. The global success of Mystères
de Paris (1842-1843) by Eugène Sue – which was quickly imitated and
gave rise to a mold recovered in every corner of the world, as shown by
a research project conducted by the Montpellier team of Médias 19 – is
merely the tip of the iceberg. From now on we have the capacity to
automatically detect forms of circulation and virality within the
corpora that are much more furtive to the eyes, but major when it comes
to the intensity of the reprints: literary works that are forgotten
today, essays, anecdotes, brief news stories (fait divers), a variety
of news...
This axis thus invites researchers to reflect on all forms of
circulation and virality in the 19th century. We will
privilege synthesizing approaches related to the experience of using
digital tools. More traditional studies on circulation and
transfers are, however, also welcomed, on condition that these largely
elucidate these phenomena of decompartmentalization of corpora. The
perspective of a world history of the francophone press (project lead by
G. Pinson and D. Cooper-Richet of the Transfopress-network) will also be
examined in this axis, amongst other issues: the career trajectories of
writers and journalists, contacts and linguistic transfers in the press,
relations between the press and emerging forms of mobility (the rapid
expansion of the railroad, the development of maritime routes, the
installment of electronic telegraph networks), cultural studies of
virality (contemporary discourse on space-time, values and debates on
new mobilities), material and poetic transformation of the press (the
start of telegraphy columns, international magazines), etc.
2: For a cultural and literary history of the press in the 20th century
(Committee member in charge of this topic : Marie-Ève Thérenty)
Numerous recent works on the press, from La Civilisation du
journal (2011) to the studies conducted by Médias 19, have chosen the
19th century as research area. However, an important objective of
contemporary studies on the press has also been to achieve a general
understanding of the media poetics and media imaginaries of the
20th century. The 20th century is a crucial moment for the expansion of
the press, its professionalization, its politicization. It is also
the moment that the written medium, losing its exclusive character,
faces the competition of other media (cinema, radio, television)
that simultaneously influence it. A new temporality, the scansion of the
weekly, is added to the daily rhythm of the processing of news, through
the creation of important magazines from the end of the 1920s and the
start of the 1930s (Candide, Gringoire, Marianne) and afterwards the
post-war years (L’Express, Le Nouvel Observateur, Le Point). The content
evolves as well: new subjects, such as sports, cinema or the
television, impose themselves alongside political or traditional
cultural news. The complete reworking of the press during the Liberation
relies on new ethical and thus poetical demands, that were conveyed by
people like Hubert Beuve-Méry and Albert Camus and had consequences for
the auctoriality of journalists. Overall, to remedy what were identified
as the excesses of the 1930s, forms of writings that were said to be
objective impose themselves, for which some newspapers, such as Le
Monde, claim to figure as a vehicle. However, we propose the hypothesis
that the literarization of press writings does not disappear and that
titles (France-Soir post-war, Libération) or formulas (the weekly, then
the mook) exist that continue to favor the hybridization of poetics.
Amongst others, these different subjects could be addressed:
writer- journalists, the relation between the written press and radio
and television, the rhythms and
periodicity of information, the issue of the weekly and the magazine,
the place of sports, cinema and television... in the written press and
the related poetics, the training of journalists and the issue of
journalism schools, the emergence of new genres and new formats, the
development of the reportage, press illustrations (photography,
drawings, comic strips...), the transformations of social, cultural,
political representations induced by the press, the comparison of the
system of the French press with other countries, the issue of women and
gender in the press... Once again, we will particularly
welcome approaches that mobilize digital tools, but more
traditional presentations are also welcomed.
3: Media culture and digital culture or the atelier for nerds (Committee
members in charge of this topic : Pierre-Carl Langlais and Julien Schuh)
Since twenty years, the old press has been massively digitized. These
corpora have progressively imposed themselves as the ideal terrain for
experimentation of hybrid scientific approaches that crosses history,
sociology, literary analysis, infrastructures related to
computer science, statistical approaches and automatic language
processing. The heterogeneity of the newspaper and the size of digitized
archives have favored the emergence of new interdisciplinary spaces
(digital libraries, digital humanities, computational literature...)
and new circulations of tools, methods and concepts between disciplines.
It has also rendered a form of distant reading more legitimate by
authorizing multiple approaches: topic modeling, supervised
classification, detection of reprints, named entity recognition, the
analysis of layout... The techniques of deep learning and automated
classification, of word embedding, open up the way for a gigantic
ensemble of texts and images that has still barely been explored. This
third topic aims at questioning the emergence of a new ecosystem of
the digitized press, from the process of elaborating the digital archive
all the way to new forms of remediations and experimental projections of
these corpora. It will also provide the opportunity to question
the methodological effect of these new practices on the
conceptualization of the research object and the construction of terrain
and of corpora. This reflexive approach, which crosses
digital humanities and digital studies could address the following
subjects: the construction of digital archives (transformative effects
of OCR’s, the mobilization of digital labor, new infrastructures of
circulation for digitized texts), the practices of distant reading
(genre classification, studies on virality and reprint networks, the
long history of visual poetics), extraction of historical data (bylines,
advertisers, stock prizes...), remediation of corpora
(re-editorialization of articles, of data or of fiction published in the
press, data visualizations...)
4: Re-editorialization of press articles: from collecting to data
aggregators (Committee member in charge of this topic : Adeline Wrona)
Reading the digitized press means giving yourself the means to point at
phenomena of migration and recycling that are hard to observe with the
naked eye and to enter a form of automatic philology which scrutinizes
variations and republications. On the other hand, producing information
online means integrating gestures to republish articles within
the everyday functioning of the editorial office, whether this is done
by segmentation, recalibration, enrichment or listing. It also
entails writing under the anonymous watch of search engines, and of
their referencing which imposes unpredictable writing instructions. One
of the phenomena most often associated with the digital resides thus in
the retrieval and the implementation of a diversification of
materialities that give shape to the text, far from the persistent myth
according to which the “virtual” would be the synonym of de-materialization.
Yesterday, just like today, the specific feature of the press text is to
have multiple lives, in multiple media forms, in different regimes of
temporality, by forming ensembles of variable
geometry. The presentations expected for this axis will analyze
different phenomena whilst accounting for this logic of
re-editorialization which transcends singular publications of the medium
of the daily paper. During the interwar period, certain magazines such
as Détective have the vocation to valorize the great writers of
editorial collections, to the point where it is at last the periodical
that integrates a logic of collecting at once.
We will interrogate different issues particular to this question of
collection in the analysis of the press of both contemporary journalism
and the 19th and 20th century; this could for example concern the
renewed modalities of the act of collecting in the digital regime –
portfolio, photographic slideshow, and other newsletters; the bylines
and copyright implicated by the circulation of one editorial model to
the other, from the generalization of “thiefs” during the July Monarchy
to the complex definition of “neighboring rights”; we will interrogate
the value of copying/reproduction, generally considered to be
an impoverishing factor of the information discourse but rarely analyzed
in its textual or stylistic reality.
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