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[Commlist] Call for chapters: Politics, media, and the war in Ukraine
Thu Apr 14 20:07:09 GMT 2022
Call for chapters
Politics, media, and the war in Ukraine
Tabe Bergman and Jesse Owen Hearns-Branaman (eds.)
The war in Ukraine could well mark a sharp turning point in global
history, as the West isolates Russia, which now appears to try to more
closely align itself with non-Western powers. Though the long-term
consequences of the conflict cannot yet be fully understood, many
observers have noted that the world is going through one of the most
dangerous phases in its history, with conflict between nuclear-armed
states a real possibility.
The present moment calls for academics, journalists, and other experts
to engage with the ‘first rough draft’ of history that is being produced
and disseminated by the media. There exists an urgent need to explore
the information war from all sides with the aim to understand the
media’s role in war and, hopefully, peace. Specifically, academics and
other experts can play a part in resisting the observed tendency of
national and global media, especially during war, to silo themselves off
by excluding voices that run counter to established state narratives.
The world’s chances to resolve the crisis will improve when people have
ready access to the main, relevant perspectives and arguments from all
sides to the conflict, and when they can avail themselves of informed
critiques of the coverage by national media systems and global media
outlets, and of insightful contextualization of the media, including the
commercial and political interests they might have.
Therefore, we would like to invite abstracts for chapters that
critically explore:
National coverage of the war in Ukraine
Comparative coverage of the war
Coverage of the refugee crisis
Propaganda and information warfare
Misinformation, disinformation, and malinformation
Censorship by governments
Censorship by private media companies
Other topics that fit the call for chapters
We are especially keen on chapters that include an original, structured
analysis of media content with any quantitative or qualitative method,
and that reflect on strengths and weaknesses of the coverage, and on the
relations between the media and other societal forces, including
politics and economics.
If you would like to participate, please send an abstract of maximum 500
words and a bio of 150 to 200 words to the editors. Routledge has
expressed interest in publishing the book. Once the abstracts have been
selected the full book proposal will be submitted to the publisher.
Timeline
Abstract deadline: 1 May
Abstract decisions: 30 May
Full chapter deadline: 1 December 2022
Chapter length: 6 to 7 thousand words
Contact
Tabe Bergman: (Tabe.Bergman /at/ xjtlu.edu.cn)
Jesse Owen Hearns-Branaman: (Johearnsbranaman /at/ uic.edu.cn)
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