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[Commlist] CFP - Climate Change and Journalism
Thu Nov 14 16:55:26 GMT 2019
Call for Abstracts/Chapters for an edited volume entitled, “Climate
Change and Journalism: Negotiating Rifts of Time” (Routledge)
Temporal scales and perceptions of past, present and future diverge,
clash and merge in complex ways when discussing and visualizing climate
change. The “slow violence” (Nixon) of climate change, linked to a
complicated and multi-sited history of extraction, has caused immediate
and imminent devastation—or, what is now increasingly referred to as the
“climate emergency” and “climate crisis”. This intersection of quick
ruptures with gradual, extended experiences of change are difficult to
reconcile, especially by journalists and media-makers. Following on from
that, this collection aims to reflect on the complex negotiations of
temporal scales related to climate change and its mediations. Such
negotiations emerge, for instance, in the temporalities related to the
mediation of GretaThunberg, which relate to geological time, its
acceleration, tipping points, institutional temporalities of politics
and journalism (and its possible acceleration), lifespans and
generations as well as living memories of weather and related events.
Such scales and perceptions are, furthermore, inscribed within more
specific temporalities of media ideologies, ideologies and cultures in
very different locales, which — at some level — all are written into the
temporalities of global communication.
The broad aim of this volume is consequently to analyze the meetings of
and schisms between various temporalities as they emerge within specific
mediations of climate change in a diverse range of locations around the
world. The collection thus seeks to understand how climate change as a
temporal process gets inscribed within the temporalities of journalism,
which inflect various local, regional, national and global times as well
as various perceptions of change related to generations, (living) memory
and (national) politics and how such perceptions are linked to the
temporalities of globalization, colonialism, race, gender and class. The
aim of this collection is to free the thinking about climate change
communication from science communication and/or social science
approaches focusing on how climate communication can be improved
(Chadwick) and, linked to that, how effects can be measured. Rather than
being immediately focused on more efficient communication as determined
and measured by an empiricist tradition, such critical cultural studies
may help tease out important nuances of discourse and power that
eventually can point towards different communicative practices.
Schedule:
Date for submitting abstracts (max 300 words): January 15, 2020
Answers with regard to acceptance: February 1
Deadline for first draft of chapters: May 1
Deadline for editors’ comments to authors: June 15
Deadline for final edited versions of chapters (7000-8000 words): August 1
Publication: Autumn 2020
Send abstracts to editors HenrikBødker, Dept. of Media and Journalism
Studies, Aarhus University, Denmark, (hb /at/ cc.au.dk) <mailto:(hb /at/ cc.au.dk)>;
and Hanna E. Morris, Annenberg School for Communication, University of
Pennsylvania, USA, (hanna.morris /at/ asc.upenn.edu)
<mailto:(hanna.morris /at/ asc.upenn.edu)>
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