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[Commlist] CfP – NECSUS Spring 2022_#Rumors
Wed Mar 17 14:44:41 GMT 2021
NECSUS
Spring 2022_#Rumors
Call for submissions
guest edited by Nicholas Baer (University of Groningen) and Maggie
Hennefeld (University of Minnesota, Twin Cities)
Did you hear? Rumor has it that the Spring 2022 issue of NECSUS will be
devoted to the topic of gossip as a prolific yet contested form of media
discourse. Spread the word!
As Mladen Dolar has recently argued, rumors are undignified in the
history of philosophy, falling under the ancient Greek category of doxa
(belief, opinion) rather than episteme (knowledge, logos). Concerning
people who are absent or at a remove, rumors are often authorless and
unfounded, and yet they can gain enormous traction, authority, and
staying power. In this regard, they play a significant and highly
complex role in what Erving Goffman called ‘impression management’ as
part of the dramaturgy of everyday social interaction.
This special section invites consideration of the non-traditional
sources of knowledge that have gained increasing currency in film and
media studies, challenging the empirical standards of evidence that
informed the discipline’s ‘historical turn’. We encourage topics and
modes of engagement that might be deemed speculative, unsubstantiated,
or otherwise unscientific, confronting elisions and erasures in the
archive. Of particular interest is work in Black, feminist, queer, and
trans media studies as well as scholarship on celebrity, fandom, and
counterpublics.
The topic of rumors and gossip is also lent vital urgency by the #MeToo
movement. Existing outside of official accounts and professional
historiography, whisper networks have served as key sites for
communicating stories of rape and abuse, even as their truth-claims pose
a crisis of documentation and verifiability. Here we are interested in
the ambivalence and political promiscuity of gossip in relation to the
Foucauldian power/knowledge complex: while rumors serve as a crucial
resource for the vulnerable, they can also be a means of baseless,
malevolent slander, leaving power structures in place and contributing
to an often-exploitative, profit-driven culture of scandal and outrage.
Finally, this special section will examine rumors and gossip as
linguistic utterances and modes of address that are transmitted and
often amplified through historically variable media forms. Gossip has
repeatedly been ignored or dismissed by linguists and philosophers,
reduced to what Martin Heidegger deemed Gerede (idle talk). Yet various
thinkers have argued that it serves an essential function in social
interaction, involving group membership, moral judgment, and relations
of trust and confidentiality. Building on existing scholarship, this
section hopes to reassess rumors and gossip in relation to current
issues in film and media studies, including digital networks, the viral
spread of (mis)information, and renegotiations of the distinction
between publicity and privacy.
Contributions may focus on but are not limited to the following topics:
# Conceptual clarifications: What are the relations and differences
between terms such as rumors, gossip, hearsay, slander, calumny, and
scandal?
# Historiographical challenges: How does one research and write the
history of film and media in the face of informal networks, material
gaps, irreducible ambiguities, and unverified or unauthorised information?
# Theories and methods: Which theoretical and methodological approaches
are especially generative for the epistemology of rumors and gossip?
# Stardom and reception studies: What role does the rumor mill play in
celebrity and fan communities as well as in the formation of alternative
histories, identities, and public spheres?
# MeToo: How do rumors and gossip serve as sites for sharing stories of
sexual violence and abuse, and what are their potentialities,
limitations, and dangers as means of resistance to hegemonic narratives
and institutional power structures?
# Media figurations: How have film and other media visualised,
thematised, and participated in the production and circulation of
knowledge and (mis)information?
# Democracy and civil society: What insights can film and media scholars
contribute to ongoing debates about social media, the viral spread of
falsehoods and conspiracy theories, and other challenges to democracy
and civil society?
Please send abstracts of 300 words, 3-5 bibliographic references, and a
short biography of 100 words to (g.decuir /at/ aup.nl)
<mailto:(g.decuir /at/ aup.nl)> by 30 April 2021. On the basis of selected
abstracts, writers will be invited to submit full manuscripts
(6,000-8,000 words, revised abstract, 4-5 keywords) by 1 February 2022.
Manuscripts will subsequently go through a double-blind peer review
process before final acceptance for publication.
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