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[Commlist] Call for papers: Nordic Journal of Media Studies (Vol.5). Preliminary title: The Return of Propaganda
Tue Dec 07 22:57:27 GMT 2021
*CALL FOR PAPERS*: *Nordic Journal of Media Studies **(Vol. 5)*
*Preliminary title:*The Return of Propaganda
*Editors: *
* Göran Bolin (Professor, Södertörn University)
* Risto Kunelius (Professor, Helsinki University)
*Contact: *
* Göran Bolin: (goran.bolin /at/ sh.se) <mailto:(goran.bolin /at/ sh.se)>
* Risto Kunelius: (risto.kunelius /at/ helsinki.fi)
<mailto:(risto.kunelius /at/ helsinki.fi)>
*Important dates: *
* Deadline for extended abstracts: 15 February 2022
* Deadline for full submissions: 1 September 2022
* Peer review: October 2022–December 2022
* Expected publication: Spring 2023
*Background and aim*
Digitisation has brought with it increased opportunities for
individuals, organisations, and loosely formed groups to produce and
disseminate information. This new infrastructure has undermined
traditional gatekeepers and led to a more plural landscape of
information and opinions, creating a media landscape where quality
control and accuracy of disseminated knowledge and facts has become
increasingly difficult to maintain. At the same time, the potential
power to control datafied flows in the platformed media environment of
communication has become more centralised and opaque, raising questions
about “networked propaganda” and data as a source of social and
political power. In recent years, we have witnessed new forms of foreign
interventions through social media in national elections, as well as the
spread of misinformation and conspiracy theories during times of
military and civil crises, for instance, the Ukranian–Russian war and
the Covid-19 pandemic. Legacy news media have increasingly come under
attack from populist movements at the same time as authoritarian
political forces are using digital media and datafied techniques to
question key democratic institutitions in society. Global tech companies
have not only become incredibly rich, but have also acquired
unprecedented power to control communication networks and flows.
This twin process of fragmentation of communication infrastructures and
centralisation of their control capacity coincides with the rise of new
social political movements (on both sides of traditional left–right
divides) and formation of new political divisions and identities.
A number of neologisms have thus entered into the vocabulary of research
and public debate – such as “fake news”, ”misinformation”,
“disinformation”, and “post-truth” – which has revived discussions on
persuasion, strategic communication, strategic narratives, soft power,
information management, and other concepts for what was once termed
propaganda.
The current moment (conjuncture) calls for a collective and critical
reflection by the community of communication scholars. This effort
demands robust empirical evidence of the dynamics changing information
environments and new methodological innovations for better analysis of
data-driven communication, but also a reinvigorated conceptual debate.
At the same time – as the history of the field (communication research)
is intimately intertwined with the social and political power of media
and communication – this points to the need for reengaging with earlier
theories of propaganda (for example, contributions by Harold Lasswell,
Jaqcues Ellul, Edward Berneys, Hanna Arendt, and Noam Chomsky), paradigm
encounters (in the field of communication research) around media power
and effects, as well as theoretisations about earlier transformative
moments.
How can we read contemporary discussions in the light of previous
thinking about political, state, or commercial propaganda and related
phenomena? What lessons can be learned from earlier theories, formed in
different political and cultural conjunctures and media landscapes? How
are new media technologies adopted for strategic purposes, and what does
that mean for theorising communication? What new evidence is there of
the “return” of propaganda in the digitalised, conflictual, and
networked media landscape? What are most promising and innovative
methods that could harness communication research with better tools to
take part in these debates?
We invite scholars around the world to address these questions in
scholarly reflections that can be descriptive, analytical, as well as
normative, and can relate to topics including, but not limited to, the
following:
* Conceptual discussions of propaganda, strategic communication,
misinformation, soft power, and adjacent terms
* The relationship between authoritarian and populist movements and
newer forms of propaganda
* The role of hacking and algorithms in manipulation of information
* Historical accounts of the development of strategic communication
technologies
* Historicizing of the phenomenon of propaganda (strategic
communication, PR, etc.)
* Analysis and accounts of national and regional characteristics of
propaganda (e.g., Europe, Asia, Latin America, Africa)
* Propaganda and ideology: The propaganda model revisited
* Propaganda and digital information management
* Empirical analysis of (past or present) dis/misinformation campaigns
* Analytical and/or methodological approaches to propaganda
* Propagandistic representations in fiction and documentary
*Procedure *
Those with an interest in contributing should write an extended abstract
(max. 750 words) where the main theme (or argument) of the intended
article is described. The abstract should contain the preliminary title
and five keywords. How the article fits with the overall aim of the
issue –* to critically reflect on the dynamics changing information
environments, propose innovative methodological approaches for analysing
data-driven communication, and reinvigorate the conceptual debate around
propaganda* – should be mentioned. **
Send your extended abstract to Göran Bolin ((goran.bolin /at/ sh.se)
<mailto:(goran.bolin /at/ sh.se)>) and Risto Kunelius
((risto.kunelius /at/ helsinki.fi) <mailto:(risto.kunelius /at/ helsinki.fi)>) by 15
February 2022.
Scholars invited to submit a full manuscript (6,000–8,000 words) will be
notified by e-mail after the extended abstracts have been assessed. All
submissions should be original works and must not be under consideration
by other publishers. All submissions are submitted to Similarity Check –
a Crossref service utilising iThenticate text comparison software to
detect text-recycling or self-plagiarism.
* Visit Crossref to learn more about Similarity Check
<https://www.crossref.org/services/similarity-check/>
After the initial submission and review process, manuscripts that are
accepted for publication must adhere to our guidelines upon final
manuscript delivery. You may choose to use our templates to assist you
in correctly formatting your manuscript.
* Download a manuscript template (docx, 31 kB)
<https://www.nordicom.gu.se/sites/default/files/Nordicom-manuscript-template_1.docx>
* Read the full instructions for authors
<https://www.nordicom.gu.se/en/publications/publish-with-nordicom/instructions-authors>
*About Nordic Journal of Media Studies*
Nordic Journal of Media Studies is a peer-reviewed international
publication dedicated to media research. The journal is a meeting place
for Nordic, European, and global perspectives on media studies. It is is
a thematic digital-only journal published once a year. The editors
stress the importance of innovative and interdisciplinary research, and
welcome contributions on both contemporary developments and historical
topics.
* Read the aims & scope of NJMS
<https://www.nordicom.gu.se/en/publications/nordic-journal-media-studies>
*About the publisher *
Nordicom is a centre for Nordic media research at the University of
Gothenburg, supported by the Nordic Council of Ministers. Nordicom
publishes all works under a Creative Commons
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) licence,
which allows for non-commercial, non-derivative types of reuse and
sharing with proper attribution. All works are published Open Access
and are available to read free of charge and without requirement for
registration. Authors retain copyright.
* Read our editorial policies
<https://www.nordicom.gu.se/en/publications/publish-with-nordicom/editorial-policies>
* Visit Creative Commons to learn more about our CC licence
<https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/legalcode>
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