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[Commlist] Call For Chapters: A Media Anthropology of India
Mon Oct 12 08:28:21 GMT 2020
*_A MEDIA ANTHROPOLOGY OF INDIA_***
*_CALL FOR CHAPTERS_***
*- Preeti Raghunath and Haripriya Narasimhan *
*_CONCEPT NOTE _*__
The intertwining of Communication and Media Studies, and the discipline
of Anthropology is not new, in the Indian context. Arjun Appadurai’s
(1990) considered takes on global communication flows and mediascapes,
Purnima Mankekar’s (1999) landmark work on screen cultures, and the
steady engagement of anthropologists like Binod C. Agrawal (1985) in
Communication and Media Studies, are some instances of efforts
at bringing the two subject areas to influence each other. The growing
number of ethnographies in Communication and Media Studies showcase the
influence of Anthropology’s methodological and epistemological offerings
to study various media-related phenomena. Research on media and cultures
is underway in various departments of Cultural Studies and Film Studies,
in the country and outside. Similarly, the popularity of digital
ethnography, anthropology of popular culture and development, are areas
that have caught Anthropology's fancy. Visual Anthropology has emerged
as a distinct field within Anthropology, while departments of Sociology
carry out ethnographic work on aspects of Communication and Media
Studies. These disparate engagements across diverse
disciplinary frameworks purport a call for a unification of these
efforts. The lack of a reflexive formulation of Media Anthropology as a
distinct sub-discipline is strikingly evident., This proposed edited
volume on Media Anthropology is a call to recognize, and conceptualize
such a sub-discipline in and on India, an area that seems to warrant
careful attention in its own right. It is in this context that we seek
to lay out the genealogy of such a body of work, take cognizance of the
‘practice’ turn in Communication and Anthropology alike, contend with
technology’s current multiple offerings, and provide insights from
decolonial and non-Western perspectives. We ask a range of questions:
What are the key works that would feature in a genealogy of a Media
Anthropology of India? Can one conceptualize such a sub-discipline
as comprising only ethnographic work, or do there exist other
methodological and epistemological inputs that could go into its
formulation? Is media synonymous with technology and related cultures?
On a related note, how would such a sub-discipline contend with
accusations of technological determinism and evolutionary undertones?
How does the ‘practice’ turn in Communication and Media Studies that
seeks to go beyond media-centrism (Couldry, 2004; Budka, 2020) propel
human-centric work? What are the politics of the digital turn as seen
through empirical realities in India? Finally, what does Media
Anthropology of India have to offer in terms of critical perspectives
and for the current decolonial turn that the social sciences are
contending with?
In a bid to answer these questions, we propose a set of themes that are
not exhaustive by any means:
ØConceptualising a Media Anthropology of India
ØGenealogical accounts and reviews of media anthropology research in/on
India
ØMethodological interventions, including but not limited to
multi-modal methods, autoethnographies, policy ethnography, design
ethnography and the like
ØMedia histories and historiographies, and their linkages to the
anthropological
ØAnthropological lenses on media, popular and tech cultures, including
but not limited to the study of newsrooms, cinema, AI
ØAccounts of Praxis, drawing on precarities and informality of labour
ØStudies of identities and marginalities of various kinds, also enabled
by the recognition of intersectionalities
ØEncountering the Transnational and Global
ØInfrastructures and the Urban
ØCapturing the Datafication of human lives that is currently underway
Please email your abstracts to _*mediaanthrobook (at) gmail (dot) com*_,
by *November 10, 2020*. The chapters themselves could be written in
diverse formats like reflexive essays, commentaries, thick
ethnographies, interviews and beyond, facilitating a range of inquiries
into the sub-discipline. The editors will work with the shortlisted
authors to weave together the edited volume, for which interest has been
expressed by a prominent international publisher.
*ABOUT THE EDITORS *
*Preeti Raghunath *is an Assistant Professor at the Symbiosis Institute
of Media and Communication (SIMC), Pune, India.
*Haripriya Narasimhan *is an Associate Professor at the Department of
Liberal Arts, Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Hyderabad, India.
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