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[Commlist] cfp: International Colloquium: The Grip of Communication
Thu Mar 31 14:35:08 GMT 2022
*Call for papers (PDF version available here
<https://www.academia.edu/73966443/International_Colloquium_The_Grip_of_Communication_December_15_16_2022_Sciences_Po_Toulouse_France_>)*
*
*
*The grip of “communication”*
*International Colloquium organized on the occasion*
*of the 10^th anniversary of the French academic journal*
*/Politiques/**/de Communication/*
*At Sciences Po Toulouse, Manufacture des Tabacs, 21 allée de Brienne,
31000 Toulouse - France*
*****
·Dates: December 15-16, 2022
·Submission of proposals (abstract): June 15, 2022
·Response and selection: July 15, 2022.
·Final submission of papers (7,500 words max.): November 15, 2022
*****
For its tenth anniversary, the French academic journal /Politiques
de/<https://www.cairn.info/revue-politiques-de-communication.htm>/communication
/is//organizing an international colloquium whose ambition is to propose
an overall reflection on "the grip of communication" in the structuring
of contemporary social spaces.
The term "communication" is polysemic: depending on the context of use,
it designates interpersonal relations, data, broadcast media,
infrastructures, economic sectors, professional groups, organizational
policies, or even new ways of acting on and thinking about the social
world. “The grip of communication” can therefore be defined, in a first
approximation, as the partial transformation of relatively autonomous
social activities due to the generalization of the use of mass media and
digital media, and the standardization of the knowledge, know-how and
professional or profane beliefs associated with them.
As various studies have shown, it can be detected in the transformations
of organizations, public and private, commercial or not, in a mutation
in the forms of expression, or in the evolution of the resources and
skills necessary to succeed socially, and therefore of the hierarchies,
cleavages and forms of legitimate socialization and sociability. For
about two decades, this unequal grip of communication has manifested
itself in an exemplary way in the digitalization of social relations:
commercial, professional, non-profit, militant, but also friendly or
amorous. It is also reflected in the growing weight of communication
professionals in sectors and professions where they were historically
absent: gastronomy, sports, justice, science, university, publishing, etc.
The ambition of this colloquium is to bring together and bring into
dialogue empirical studies aiming to measure the forms and the strength
of this grip of communication in various social fields: politics or
economic activities, of course, but also culture, journalism, teaching
and research, sport, fashion, law, religion, food, clothing and even
ways of being and living in society.
The "grip of communication" is not a new question for social science
research. Its ideological, political, economic, technical and
organizational dimensions have been explored. In a cumulative
perspective, the first ambition of this colloquium is to propose an
assessment of the works on the evolution of social practices and
representations of communication and their organizational implications.
It also proposes to question the social relations of domination - of
gender, class, "race", generation - of which communication is a tool and
sometimes a revealer. In what proportions and according to what variable
modalities is this "grip" of communication exercised (or felt),
according to the specific logics of a given social space? Is the
professionalization of communication a form of rationalization of the
work of legitimization or of symbolic domination? Does the extension of
the practices of communication take part of a growing subordination to
economic and political interests? Is it a resource monopolized by a few
institutions or people with better resources? On the contrary, is it
also observed - and with what ambivalences - in the militant, scientific
or artistic practices of contestation of the social order?
The need to capitalize on the numerous contributions of the social
sciences is in line with the desire of the journal /Politiques de
communication/ to open up new avenues for research. These new ways are
established by the exploration of objects having escaped until now the
investigations of the research, but they can also be drawn in the course
of a renewed work of problematization and distancing that highlight the
induced effects of communication in social universes already well studied.
Researchers from different social science disciplines are invited to
participate in this collective critical enterprise. The expected
proposals should, on the one hand, present an explicit construction of
the object around this "grip of communication", and on the other hand,
mobilize and rely on rigorously constructed empirical data in order to
avoid the risk of speculative denunciation.
The expected communications can be inscribed in one of the three
following axes:
*1)**The “professionalization” of communication and its effects*
In this first axis, the expected contributions will try to show how
agents who seek to legitimize communication skills and know-how are
gradually imposing themselves in sectors that until now had escaped
them, affecting at the same time the logics of functioning and sometimes
even the hierarchies of the spaces in which they evolve.
In an analysis centered on the study of the processes of construction of
the professional groups, it is first a question of studying the
emergence, in sectors of activities from which they were excluded until
now, of agents specialized in communication. How is the profession of
communicator invented in the artistic, gastronomic or associative
sectors, for example? By what type of agents are these activities
carried out and how are new skills and competences imposed in these
sectors? How is the recognition of these specialties organized through
the action of professional groups, associations, unions or schools? In
sectors where professional groups are in the process of being
institutionalized - such as politics or sports - it will be possible to
understand how spaces are reconfigured and how new professional norms
are imposed.
We will then look at the emergence and construction of new professions
which, based on digital technologies, offer new professional
opportunities to agents. How are the jobs of influencers, streamers,
gamers, community managers, etc. being invented today? What are the
conditions that allow people to make a living from these activities?
What are the trajectories of those who invest in these new spaces? How
does professional socialization take place in these sectors? How are the
norms of the profession progressively constructed and organized?
Finally, it will be a question of understanding what the emergence of
these professional groups does to the sectors of activity in which they
have invested. How does the arrival of communicators transform the world
of publishing or gastronomy? What are social networks doing to
politics? How are beauty influencers transforming gender norms? It is
therefore the grip of communicators on certain fields and sectors of
activity that will be studied here and their effects on the fields in
question. In what way does the presence of these agents transform or not
these sectors of activity and the social hierarchies that govern them?
What about the effects of their symbolic action on social relations of
domination?
*2)**Information under the grip of communication*
A second line of questioning deals with the current forms of the grip of
communication on the production of journalistic information. If the
professionalization of sources and their influence on the co-production
of journalistic information, the modalities of information dissemination
and the representations of the public associated with them, or even the
sources of media consecration are classic problems since the 1990s and
2000s, there is a lack of recent empirical work that updates knowledge
and makes the contemporary forms of these fundamental issues
intelligible. The answers to the questions raised here will be attentive
to the characteristics of press institutions and their editorial
offices, to the distribution of resources and competencies, and to the
issues of competition in and around the journalistic field.
The contributions can first of all question the modalities of the
professionalization of information sources and its effects on the
information produced. Has it become more pronounced? Is it based on new
knowledge and communication practices, especially with the use of
social-digital networks? It seems impossible today for a minister, an
artist or even a scientist to exist publicly without maintaining a
Twitter account, just as it seems unthinkable for political, cultural or
scientific journalists not to scrutinize this social network for news.
Have new sources of information, previously neglected or in the
minority, acquired a new influence thanks to new communication
practices? Has the professionalization of sources also developed in
social sectors - and journalistic specialties - where it was marginal
(sports information, cultural information, etc.)? Has the development of
digital technology, and in particular social networks or online videos,
offered new resources to journalists, allowing them to distance
themselves more critically from traditional information sources?
The contributions can also take as their object the transformations of
the modes of diffusion of journalistic information, thanks to the new
means of communication (websites, smartphones, social networks) and the
development of "transmedia", and their effects in return on the
representations of the public and the production of the information.
What new formats do these means of communication offer, and how are they
appropriated by journalists? Does the intensification of the measurement
of Internet users' online behavior increase the influence of marketing
considerations already identified in the production of information in
the 1980s? Has the generalization of the use of digital media made
possible the emergence or the diffusion of "alternative"
(non-journalistic) forms of information? How is determined the
credibility and authority of the information thus disseminated?
The contributions can finally question the current forms of media
consecration. If the processes of accumulation and monetization of media
capital are beginning to be well known, there are still few works that
articulate the analysis of the notoriety acquired by the journalistic
field, and that gained by other means of communication, notably digital
networks. Under what conditions and for which social agents does the
latter allow to compensate or increase the former?
*3)** “The grip of communication” as a public problem and a problem of
the public*
A third axis will focus on the grip of communication, and in particular
of digitalization, on the "public" in the broadest sense, whether it is
a question of the reproduction and/or transformation of ordinary social
relations (receptions, appropriations and uses of the media), on the one
hand, and of the arenas of construction of public problems
(claims-making activities), on the other.
One of the effects of the rise of "communication" is the trivialization
of strategies of self-presentation in the most ordinary interactions,
such as self-branding on social media or the renewal of profane
practices of production and circulation of information. If these aspects
have been widely studied for the last twenty years, few works have tried
to analyze the social conditions of possibility of these activities,
their costs and benefits of appropriation - economic and symbolic -
according to the social properties of the agents who invest in them.
What assessment can be made of the existing research concerning the hold
of communication on the receivers, the users, the publics of the media,
according to the positioning of the agents in social space, of the
capitals they have, and of the unequal distribution of the material and
cognitive instruments necessary for the incorporation of the most
legitimate information and communication practices? What benefits of
conformity or distinction are agents likely to derive from their
behaviors and attitudes towards digital media and tools within the
family circle, peer groups, their professional worlds, their political
and religious commitments, or their leisure practices? Is digital media
a recognized and active resource, and if so, for whom and under what
conditions?
A second aspect of this axis concerns the place and the role of the grip
of communication in the construction of public problems. We observe, on
the one hand, a transformation of the processes of publicization and
politicization of social problems in favor of the multiplication of
communication channels and the diversification of the arenas of public
debate. This observation, commonplace, of a rise in the carrying
capacity of social problems can raise questions that are less so, if we
reason with the tools of the sociology of public problems: what are the
effects of this modification of the channels and spaces of expression on
the principles of selection of the issues? How does the influence of
communication on the processes of setting the agenda of problems work?
Can we observe an intensification of the competition between public
problem entrepreneurs, while the struggles for the attention of the
public are subject to very sophisticated rationalization strategies? To
what extent do these transformations contribute to making "communication
problems" and their "solutions" into political ready-to-think?
The grip of communication is manifested, on the other hand, by the fact
that it constitutes itself as a public meta-problem, that is to say a
category subsuming other problems regularly put on the media and
political agenda, whether it is a question of the criticism of the media
and journalism, of commercial advertising, of political and public
communication, or even of the criticism of digital media. How and by
whom are the public problems of this all-encompassing problem of the
"grip of communication" constructed and prioritized? Are they the object
of a specific work of politicization or, on the contrary, of
depoliticization and even their disappearance from the public agenda?
Far from limiting ourselves to the analysis of critical discourses and
"controversies" on these issues, the papers will pay attention to the
concrete activities of claims-making in the arenas of public debate, but
also to the power relations between claims-makers, according to their
socio-professional positions and properties, to the social and
institutional conditions of their positions and to the specificities,
hierarchies and mutual relations between the social spaces of production
and circulation of their discourses, be they local, national or
international.
*****
Proposals for papers should be sent before June 15, 2022 to the
following address: (colloque.emprise.communication /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(colloque.emprise.communication /at/ gmail.com)>
Short (about 450 words), they should present their object of study, the
theoretical framework, the problematic and the empirical elements. They
will be careful to explain the critical dimension of the approach and
indicate what they wish to show/demonstrate.
Papers can be submitted in French and English. No payment from the
authors will be required.
The authors whose proposals are selected will participate in the
colloquium and, at the same time, will submit a written version of their
paper, which will be reviewed for publication in the anniversary issue
of the journal. The proposals will be selected by the editorial board of
the journal /Politiques de communication/.
The committee will make its decision by July 15, 2022. For the
publication of a special anniversary issue of the journal, papers should
be written in a format that corresponds to the journal's format and sent
to the conference organizing team by November 15, 2022.
***Organizing Committee*
- Olivier BAISNEE
- Benjamin FERRON
- Sandrine LEVEQUE
- Jérémie NOLLET
*Scientific Council*
Anne-Claude AMBROISE-RENDU | Olivier BAISNEE | Christine BARATS | Rodney
BENSON | Clémentine BERJAUD | Loïc BLONDIAUX | Julien BOYADJIAN |
Isabelle CHARPENTIER | Ivan CHUPIN | Clément DESRUMAUX | Benjamin FERRON
| Charles GADEA | Jean-Paul Géhin | Nicolas HUBE | Christian LE BART |
Jean-Baptiste LEGAVRE | Brigitte LE GRIGNOU | Pierre LEROUX | Sandrine
LEVEQUE | Erik NEVEU | Jérémie NOLLET | Caroline OLLIVIER-YANIV |
Aurélie OLIVESI | Stéphane OLIVESI | Valentina PRICOPIE | Rémy RIEFFEL |
Julie SEDEL | Jean-Claude SOULAGES| Anaïs THEVIOT | Sandra VERA ZAMBRANO**
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*****
The journal /Politiques de communication/ aims to shed light on
communication in its social and political dimensions. Its objective is
to produce rigorous, methodologically supported knowledge, seeking to
uncover the logics of communication. An analytical journal, it uses the
social sciences in their diversity to explore “apparatus,” “fields,”
“worlds,” and “configurations,” within which communication takes part in
the rationalization of practices, in the peaceful exercise of power and
its legitimation, in the changes in the relationships that individuals
have with themselves and with social groups, and in the new forms of
subjectivity that result from this.
/Politiques de communication/ pays particular attention to knowledge
without grandeur, to neglected or marginal systems of representation and
the image of the social groups that bear them, to commonplace empirical
data, to professional practice; in short, to all sorts of subjects that
have been left behind. It aims to study the phenomena of communication
from a symbolic viewpoint in order to gain a better understanding of
their anthropological and political implications. It also seeks to not
separate scholarly discourse from non-expert discourse, in order to
enrich the former with all sorts of empirical data and to thus recall
that the smallest glimpse of truth is reliant on one condition . . .
politics.
Working to free itself from the academic routine, which is an expression
of the social division of scientific work, /Politiques de communication
/intends to curb the influence of disciplinary rationales. It seeks to
be a forum for mutual and fruitful exchange between researchers from
France and the rest of the world, who, working on the same objectives
but with different methodologies and theoretical frameworks, hope to
come together and challenge each other in order to renew perceptions of
the contemporary reality of communication.
*Editorial Board*
_Editor-in-chief_
Stéphane Olivesi (Université Versailles Saint-Quentin, France)
_Editorial committee_
Olivier Baisnée (IEP de Toulouse), Clémentine Berjaud (U. Paris 1),
Julie Bouchard (U. Paris 13), Julien Boyadjian (IEP de Lille), Isabelle
Charpentier (U. de Picardie), Ivan Chupin (UP Saclay), Jean-Baptiste
Comby (U. Paris 2), Clément Desrumaux (U. Lyon 2), Benjamin Ferron (U.
Paris Est), Nicolas Hubé (U. de Lorraine), Nicolas Kaciaf (IEP de
Lille), Pierre Leroux (UCO), Philippe Le Guern (U. de Rennes), Sandrine
Lévêque (IEP de Lille), Clément Mabi (U.T. de Compiègne), Jérémie Nollet
(IEP de Toulouse), Aurélie Olivesi (U. Lyon 1), Julie Sedel (U. de
Strasbourg), Anaïs Théviot (UCO).
_Scientific committee_
Anne-Claude Ambroise-Rendu (UP Saclay), Christine Barats (U. Paris 5),
Loïc Blondiaux (U. Paris 1), Eric Darras (IEP de Toulouse), Pascal
Dauvin (UP Saclay), Charles Gadéa (U. de Nanterre), Jean-Paul Gehin (U.
de Poitiers), Chistian Le Bart (IEP de Rennes), Jean-Baptiste Legavre
(U. Paris 2), Brigitte Le Grignou (U. Paris Dauphine), Gérard Mauger
(CESSP-CSE CNRS), Erik Neveu (IEP de Rennes), Caroline Ollivier-Yaniv
(U. Paris Est), Yves Poirmeur (UP Saclay), Rémy Rieffel (U. Paris 2),
Jean-Claude Soulages (U. Lyon 2).
_International committee___
Patrick Amey (U. de Genève), Stefanie Averbeck-Lietz (U. de Brême),
Rodney Benson (U. de New York), Marcel J. Broersma (U. de Groningue),
Aeron Davis (Goldsmiths College - Londres), Oliver Fahle (U. de la Ruhr,
Bochum), Andreas Fickers (U. du Luxembourg), Fiorenza Gamba (U. de
Sassari), Eric Georges (U. du Québec - Montréal), Oliver Hahn (U. de
Passau – Bavière), François Heinderyckx (U. libre de Bruxelles), Sylvain
Lefèvre (U. du Québec - Montréal), Nadine Machikou Ndzesop (U. Yaoundé
II), Victor Manuel Marí Sáez (U. de Cadix), Liz Moor (Goldsmiths College
- Londres), David Morley (Goldsmiths College - Londres), Spiros
Moschonas (U. d’Athènes), Valentina Pricopie (U. Valahia de Târgoviste),
Veneza Mayora Ronsini (U. of Santa Maria - Brésil), Klaus Schonbach (U.
de Vienne), Roland Schroeder (U. d’Iserlohn -
Rhénanie-du-Nord-Westphalie), Rui Torres (U. Fernando Pessoa - Porto),
Jean Zaganiaris (EGE - Rabat).
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