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[Commlist] cfp: A True and Fair View: Communicative, Linguistic and Ethical Aspects of Expressing Point of View in Journalism
Tue Mar 03 04:34:57 GMT 2020
CALL FOR PAPERS
A True and Fair View:
Communicative, Linguistic and Ethical Aspects of Expressing Point of
View in Journalism
10-11 December 2020
Fourth biennial conference of the Brussels Institute for Journalism
Studies (BIJU)
Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB), Belgium
Deadline for proposals: 30 June 2020
Please send a proposal of no more than 300 words (excluding selected
references) together with your affiliation and a short biography (c. 100
words) to (fairview /at/ vub.be) <mailto:(fairview /at/ vub.be)>by 30 June 2020.
Decisions will be announced by 15 July.
Plenary speakers
KARIN WAHL-JORGENSEN (Cardiff University, UK)
PETER R. R. WHITE (University of New South Wales, Australia)
After three successful small-scale, high-quality international
conferences in 2014, 2016 and 2018, the Brussels Institute for
Journalism Studies (BIJU) is now ready to launch its fourth call for
papers. The topic for this year’s conference will be the expression of
standpoint and viewpoint in journalism. As always, our conference is
multidisciplinary. So, we invite scholars from different backgrounds
like communication and media studies, linguistics, ethics, epistemology
and political and social sciences to think about the modi operandi and
the desirability of journalists expressing their standpoints and sharing
their views.
Many different aspects come to mind when thinking about views and
standpoints in (journalistic) communication. Many different terms apply
as well. In linguistics, stance, vantage point and footing are
differentiated and non-interchangeable terms for referring to the
perspective from which one communicates. Applying these insights to
journalistic communication offers exciting new way of approaching the
expression of perspective in journalistic writing and reporting.
The linguistic study of reported speech and quoting can also contribute
to the study of expressing perspective. Quoting several sources is a
commonly used technique for keeping a neutral or ‘neutralistic’ position
in journalism, at the risk of giving a too broad forum to non-relevant
sources or leaving the news consumer puzzled.
The line between point of view and opinion is thin. When expressing
opinions, assessments are made. In order to be able to judge whether a
situation is desirable or non-desirable, a norm has to be defined and
this raises new questions. How do journalists express or imply the norms
or reference points they operate from? In this context, the application
of linguistic Appraisal Theory can be illuminating.
Such linguistic approaches to point of view in journalism connect with
longtime, yet, recently revitalized developments and debates, in both
professional and scholarly fields, relating to what constitutes
legitimate journalistic goals, role conceptions, and (associated)
practices or genres. This ultimately pertains to the normative
foundations of journalism which, at least from a Western perspective,
have been primarily informed by the so-called ‘core value’ or ‘strategic
ritual’ of objectivity and the implied tendency for journalists to
identify with the disposition of a neutral, detached, ‘passive’ observer
of events and transmitter of information, as opposed to adopting a more
‘active’ or ‘interventionist’ role. Indeed, the idea of the journalist
‘providing views rather than news’, and reflecting upon or variously
interpreting the news, has been typically relegated to the background by
the objectivity-led and ratio-centered ethos of the traditional news
paradigm.
Challenges to established professional norms and standards have surely
been evident throughout journalism’s history. Yet, indications of a what
has been identified as a ‘paradigm reexamination’ have arguably become
ever more manifest in the contemporary cultural and sociopolitical
moment, which is notably characterized by shifting knowledge and truth
claims, a heightened sense of ‘(self-)reflexivity’, and an increased
centrality of subjectivity and ‘emotionality’ in public life. In
combination with the affordances of digital, networked media, and the
coping strategies developed by legacy media in response to market
pressures, non-professional ‘newcomers’ in the journalistic field, and
questions of public confidence and accountability, this context has
provided an impetus for both novel and once ‘marginalized’
non-paradigmatic journalistic genres and practices to proliferate and
(re)claim authoritative status. As part of what has been referred to as
an ‘interpretive turn’, subjective, evaluative, (self-)reflective,
experiential, and ‘confessional’ discourses have rendered the
journalist’s ‘voice’ more prominent, moving beyond a detached,
matter-of-fact, ‘he said, she said’ style of reporting and making the
boundaries between news, opinions, and personal narratives ever more
porous. In the process, the association of truth or epistemic authority
with objectivity has been variously defied, or replaced with
considerations of transparency and epistemic hesitation.
We invite participants to engage in a critical discussion of point of
view in journalism. Possible questions which can be addressed are: is it
possible to define the ‘proper’ standpoint, is it possible to give a
full account of a state of affairs, does the traditional journalistic
method of including multiple sources guarantee balanced reporting, is
interpretive or transparent journalism to be preferred over the
traditional ‘neutralistic’ journalism, how can interpretive forms of
journalism be meaningfully differentiated, measured and assessed, how
does point of view relate to verification, assertion, and affirmation,
how can stances and points of view be rendered linguistically and/or
visually, is there a place for emotions in journalism, what are the
ethical implications of expressing points of view in journalism?
Inspirational literature:
Wahl-Jorgensen, Karin (2019). Emotions, Media and Politics. Cambridge:
Polity Press.
White, Peter R. R. (2020). The Putative Reader in Mass Media Persuasion:
Stance, Argumentation and Ideology. Discourse and Communication (online
soon).
We welcome submissions from all relevant disciplinary backgrounds
approaching topics including but certainly not limited to:
The objectivity norm / bias in news reporting
Interpretive journalism
Transparency in journalism
All forms of advocacy journalism
The position of point of view in non-Western models of journalism
Ethical aspects of the expression of opinion
Linguistic devices for neutralism
Plurivocity in news reporting
Appraisal and alignment
Point of view or the expression of ‘voice’ in visual communication
Fake news / Post-truth
We welcome both qualitative and quantitative methodologies, and analyses
at process, product/text, and/or audience level.
After the previous conferences, we have edited special issues of
renowned journals and a book volume with a renowned publisher bundling
the most innovative papers presented. We will endeavour to do the same
after this conference.
Junior researchers are warmly invited to participate.
The venue for the conference will be the Africa Museum
(https://www.africamuseum.be/en) Leuvensesteenweg 13, 3080 Tervuren.
This is about 15 km from the Brussels city centre, but it can easily be
reached with tram 44.
Conference fee (including reception, lunches, coffee):
€ 150 (regular participants), € 75 (PhD students).
Dinner will be organized on Friday 11 December and charged separately.
Questions about any aspect of the conference should be addressed to
(fairview /at/ vub.be).
For updates on the practical organization, please check our website
http://www.vub.ac.be/en/events/2020/fairview.
Websites of the previous conferences:
https://www.vub.be/en/events/2014/hybridity-and-the-news-hybrid-forms-of-journalism-in-the-21st-century
https://www.vub.be/en/events/2016/constructed-constructive-journalism
https://www.vub.be/en/events/2018/whatnews
Publications of the previous conferences:
Hybridity and the news: Blending genres and interaction patterns in new
forms of journalism
(Journalism)
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/1464884916657520
Post-truth and the political: Constructions and distortions in
representing political facts (Discourse, Context & Media)
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S2211695818303271
Constructive journalism: Concepts, practices, and discourses
(Journalism)
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/1464884918770885
Special issue of Journalism Studies on News Values (in preparation)
Book volume on News Values from an Audience Perspective (Palgrave
McMillan – in preparation)
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