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[Commlist] Call for Papers “Radio Soundscapes in (Post)Colonial Settings”
Tue Apr 19 09:04:29 GMT 2022
*Gentle Reminder - Call for Papers*____
*“Radio Soundscapes in (Post)Colonial Settings” Universidade Católica
Portuguesa, Lisbon, 7-8 July 2022*____
Over the last century broadcasting has played a central role in the
construction and dissemination of national cultures and shared
identities. Employed to promote the idea of nation within state borders,
for Imperial nations this role was extended overseas, where the audio
medium became central in the effort to unite the home countries with
those expats living in the far reaches of empires. In many territories
under European rule, namely in Africa, this led to the creation of what
were at first white soundscapes in which local cultures and languages
were absent from the airwaves.____
In the late 1950s, as the winds of decolonization swept through the
African continent, state and private-owned imperial and colonial
stations opened up their programming schedules to African languages and
cultures. In some cases, such as the BBC, this was aimed at
safeguarding the station’s listenership in the context of increasing
competition from stations set-up by the nascent African states (Potter,
2012; Ritter, 2021), while in others, namely in the Portuguese Empire,
programmes in African languages were used to indoctrinate the black
population on the supposed benefits of colonialism (Ribeiro, 2017).
State-funded broadcasters coexisted with private stations that developed
commercial radio style and programming, where new jingles and music
genres created a novel and parallel irresistible (sonorous) empire (di
Grazia, 2005; Domingos, 2021). But in this radio ecosystem that emerged
in the mid-20th century in different regions of Africa there were also
other stations operated by independence movements that resorted to
broadcasting to promote independence from colonial powers and to foster
new national identities. In the postcolonial era, broadcasting was
instrumental in fostering new cultural and political identities, with
the new independent states also resorting to the audio medium to create
their own sound identity.____
The conference “Radio Soundscapes in (Post)Colonial Settings” aims to
bring together scholars researching the history of colonial and
postcolonial broadcasting and sound, in order to shed light on the role
of radio and music in forging audible and sonorous empires and new-born
nations. Thus, the conference seeks papers that discuss technologies,
programmes and audiences in both colonial and postcolonial settings,
including those focusing on the construction of new soundscapes and
radio ecosystems following decolonization. Among many questions that may
be addressed, the conference welcomes papers including, but not limited
to, the following topics:____
* Radio and national identities (namely in postcolonial nations);____
* Soundscapes in colonial, decolonial and postcolonial settings;____
* Imperial, colonial and postcolonial broadcasting institutions
and professionals;____
* Reception of imperial, colonial and postcolonial broadcasts;____
* Technologies used for crossborder broadcasting;____
* Radio, ethnicity and race;____
* Radio and practices of resistance;____
* Broadcasting and colonial subjectivities;____
* Radio and colonial independences;____
* Radio and decolonization;____
* Media entanglements in imperial contexts;____
* Intermedial approaches to radio history in colonial contexts;____
* Media systems in colonial, decolonial and postcolonial settings;____
* Radio and music markets in colonial and postcolonial contexts;____
* The challenges of oral history;____
* Sources and archives dealing with broadcasting in colonial
and postcolonial settings.____
Selected presenters will have a 20-minute slot in which to present their
work, followed by Q&A.____
*How to Submit?*____
Please send a title and a 400-word abstract in Word or Pdf
format until* 20 April, 2022 (deadline)* to
(broadcasting.empire /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(broadcasting.empire /at/ gmail.com)>____
Author name(s), institutional affiliation(s) and contact information
should be sent on a separate file or on the body of the e-mail.____
Authors will be notified of acceptance *on 6 May 2022.*____
*Conference fee*____
The conference will be hosted by the Research Centre for Communication
and Culture (CECC) at Universidade Católica Portuguesa and will take
place within the framework of the research project “Broadcasting to the
Portuguese Empire: Nationalism, Colonialism, Identity” funded by FCT and
FEDER. For more information about the project visit:
https://www.broadcastingempire.com <https://www.broadcastingempire.com/>____
The conference will be held at the Lisbon campus of Universidade
Católica Portuguesa, which can be easily accessed via metro (30-minute
ride), bus or taxi (10-minute ride) from the Lisbon airport.
Participants who are unable to travel to Lisbon will be offered the
possibility of participating online.____
Full fee: 100€ (early bird) / 130€ (standard fee)____
Reduced fee for students: 50€ (early bird) / 65€ (standard fee)____
Lunch and coffee-breaks included.
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