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[Commlist] CfP Culture Wars: Statues, Flags, Streets and Squares: WPCC special issue
Tue Jun 01 21:03:35 GMT 2021
Call for Abstracts and Papers: WESTMINSTER PAPERS IN COMMUNICATION AND
CULTURE. New Special Issue.
CULTURE WARS: STATUES, FLAGS, STREETS AND SQUARES
Issue Editor: Anthony McNicholas
Flags, emblems, monuments, street names, statues are some of the means
by which nations and states promote themselves, both to their own
citizens and to the world at large; the public face of our imagined
communities. But as they seek to unify, such symbols have often been the
occasion for contestation, disagreement, violence even. Empires,
systems, regimes rise and fall. Societies change, and with such change
comes a reassessment of societies’ symbolic life, as yesterday’s heroes
become today’s villains, past triumphs a present embarrassment. The past
is continually raked over, re-examined and reinterpreted, with each
re-examination argued over. Examples abound from across the globe: the
toppling of Rhodes’ statue in Cape Town in 2015; in Budapest, Soviet era
leaders are gathered together in Memento Park. While Ukraine had by 2017
decreed the removal of all 1,320 statues of Lenin. And in Germany there
are no monuments commemorating the military in the war years. In the
USA, statues of Confederate leaders are being taken down; thwarted by a
statute forbidding such removals, the mayor of Birmingham Alabama had
one offending figure covered in plastic. Outside Delhi statues of
military and British royalty languish, a ‘shambles’ in a ‘veritable dust
bowl’ (Times of India) awaiting a revamp that never seems to arrive, the
neglect telling its own story. In the UK the national flag and the
statues of slavers are being fought over by the government and sections
of the population deploying memes, hashtags and video footage whilst
also appearing in official and commercial films, TV, documentary, news
footage.
Submissions are welcome covering the role of the media in all forms
(from public service broadcasting to social media, feature films to
advertising) exploring contested representations of such symbols and
their remediation. WPCC publishes research articles, commentaries and
book reviews. For guidelines see
https://www.westminsterpapers.org/site/author-guidelines
Deadline for abstracts:
Please submit a 150-250 word abstract with keywords to WPCC’s submission
system with 6 keywords by Monday 28 June 2021 by registering
at https://www.westminsterpapers.org/submit/start/ uploading the
abstract in addition to filling in the submission details. You will
receive feedback regarding encouragement to submit a full paper (a
resubmission on the system) or feedback from the issue editor(s)/WPCC
within 7-10 days later.
Deadline for full papers:
Full papers are expected by Monday 30 August 2021, 23:59 submitted to
the WPCC system. All papers will go through double peer-review.
Publication date: from 1 November 2021
WPCC is an open access journal and there are no fees for contributors.
Published by the University of Westminster Press in conjunction
with CAMRI. All content in this issue and in its archive is available
free to read.
www.westminsterpapers.org
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