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[Commlist] CfP Media Building
Thu Feb 25 03:55:43 GMT 2021
[Virtual Conference]
Media Building: Architecture, Communications and the Built Environment,
7-10 July 2021
Hosted by the University of Salford and Northumbria University
Abstract Deadline: 11 April 2021
Since the emergence of the first newspapers, the relationship between
place and content has been central to the media’s development. The
spatial politics of media production could fundamentally shape its
reception and circulation. If ‘the medium is the message’, then this
applied equally to where media artefacts were created as to what was
contained within them. Publishers quickly understood that, from both a
commercial and philosophical perspective, landmark headquarters or
publishing plants could help enforce the legitimacy and significance of
their enterprises. Thus, structures such as the striking neo-gothic
spires of the Chicago Tribune tower or the sleek art-deco exteriors of
the Daily Express building in London offered compelling expressions of
media power, modernity, and the aesthetics of mass communication,
providing what Aurora Wallace describes as a “definable shape…a hook on
which to hang some news about the media itself.” At the same time, media
buildings became key nodes in the urban geography of communications,
complementing editorial efforts to make and remake the modern metropolis.
This virtual conference invites contributions which explore the
intersections between architecture, communications, and the built
environment. While all papers will be considered, our focus is on print,
broadcast, and digital media.
We are interested in the relationship between media content and media
space, and the ways in which this relationship has changed over time.
What would press barons such as Joseph Pulitzer, who saw their buildings
as “the central and highest point(s) of New World Civilization”, have
made of Facebook’s Menlo Park Campus; an arguably more impressive yet
radically different vision of media power? How have media buildings –
both real and imagined - informed and given form to a range of
sociopolitical, cultural and ideological constructs, becoming a
“delivery mechanism” for ideas about objectivity, authority and
identity? And what can the past and futures of media architecture tell
us about the changing nature of media production, distribution, and
consumption in the twenty-first century?
Potential topics and case studies include:
• The rise and fall of the “newspaper row” (Fleet Street; Park Row;
Picayune Place; etc.)
• Media power and the modern skyscraper (China Media Group HQ, Beijing;
the New York Times building, Manhattan; Der Spiegel building, Hamburg;
etc.)
• Media cities and mediated cities (Facebook Menlo Park Campus, Silicon
Valley; MediaCity, Salford Quays; Media City Park, Dubai; etc.)
• Media buildings in popular culture (Superman and the Daily Planet;
Janoth Publications and The Big Clock, etc.)
• Liminal spaces, private architectures, media publics (blogging and the
coffee shop; radical media and the built environment; media cultures in
the ‘post-newsroom’ age; etc.)
• Reuse, relocation, and the afterlife of media architecture (the
redevelopment of the Chicago Tribune building as condominiums, the
Chicago Bee building as a public library, etc.)
• Media building design and journalism/newswork politics (soft power and
media architecture; the ‘newsroom’ as a social and cultural construct; etc.)
• Race, Ethnicity and Media Buildings (the Johnson Publishing building
in Chicago, the Daily Forward building in New York, etc.)
• Media architecture and the end of empire (Times of India building,
Mumbai; National Media Group, Nairobi; Broadcasting House, London; etc.)
In the spirit of debate and inclusivity, we welcome proposals for either
individual presentations (c. 20 minutes), or panels (c. 60-90 minutes)
in a variety of formats: traditional conference papers, pre-recorded
papers, roundtables, scholar-practitioner interviews, multimedia
presentations, etc.
Accounting for the participation of international scholars, the
conference will follow an afternoon format, with sessions taking place
between 12 and 6pm BST. If you have a preference for appearing earlier
or later in the day depending on your own time-zone, please highlight
this as part of your abstract submission.
Send abstracts (400 words max), or any questions about format and
presentations, to Carole O’Reilly [(c.oreilly /at/ salford.ac.uk)] and E. James
West [(ejwestuk /at/ gmail.com)] by 11 April 2021.
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