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[Commlist] CFP: Discourse, Authority and Manipulation in Multimodal Perspective
Fri Sep 16 20:39:18 GMT 2022
CFP
Discourse, Authority and Manipulation in Multimodal Perspective (DAMMP 2023)
Conference organised by IDEA at The University of Lorraine (Nancy) –
16^th -17^th March 2023
Discourse emanates from various sources, some of which may be considered
to be more authoritative than others. The knowledge available from these
sources is “taught and learned”, “produced and used”, “sold and
consumed” (Van Dijk 2011: 33). This raises the central epistemological
question of the sources of knowledge, and for what purpose knowledge is
disseminated. Sources which command authority set “knowledge standards”
(Ibid.). These standards give rise to the theory of “epistemic
vigilance”, in which “interaction among epistemically vigilant agents is
likely to generate not only psychological but also social vigilance
mechanisms” (Sperber et al. 2010: 361). To what extent do the
information sources which constitute a “sociology of knowledge” reveal a
correlation between authority in discourse and access to knowledge?
The link between the concept of manipulation and Critical Discourse
Studies (CDS) is well-established (Van Dijk 2006). Manipulation in
discourse takes place primarily “by text and talk” and “is a form of
talk-in-interaction” linked to power and abuses of power (Ibid.: 360).
As manipulation occurs within the mind, the cognitive processes that
govern it lend themselves to a cognitive approach (Ibid.). Certain
genres pose increasing challenges for CDS. Firstly, growing political
scepticism, coupled with the public’s need for “a simple and
understandable world in times of uncertainty and insecurity”, has
resulted in people looking to the fictionalisation of politics in the
media (Wodak 2011: 206). Secondly, technological advances in the
twenty-first century have facilitated the development and proliferation
of new forms of media. These forms of “ephemeral media” (Grainge 2011)
have changed the rapidity with which information can be transmitted,
while video-sharing platforms can result in traditional segments of
discourse becoming fragmented.
Consequently, there has been a recent turn towards multimodality in CDS,
with increasing amounts of information processed through the “visual
channel” (Hart 2016: 336). A major contribution to the multimodal
approach is Systemic Functional Multimodal Discourse Analysis (SF-MDA)
(O’Halloran and Lim 2014; O’Halloran et al. 2019). Inspired by Systemic
Functional Linguistics (Halliday and Matthiessen 2014), SF-MDA uses
multimodal analytic methods involving “mathematical techniques and
scientific visualizations” (O’Halloran and Lim 2014: 148). Multimodal
approaches have “a view of meaning as being greater than the sum of its
parts”, in which “meaning in any communicative act is not just a product
of the individual modes that contribute to it but of the interplay
between them” (Hart and Marmol Queralto 2021: 530-531).
The discursive picture can be enhanced by gesture analysis, which
provides for a coordinated message with speech (Kendon 2004; Streeck
2009). Specifically, the “impulse to gesture” occurs “at the interface
between a cognitive-linguistic system and a face-to-face communication
context” (Harrison 2018: 214). To this extent, gestures cannot be
reduced to the mere externalisation of “pre-existing mental
representations by means of body movements” (Kita and Alibali 2017:
262). Gesture, like multimodality in general, may demonstrate semiotic
convergence with language, but does such convergence exist in
manipulative contexts?
Although manipulation may involve an epistemic shift away from fact, how
should manipulation be analysed in genres of fiction which contain
elements of fact or reality? The concept merits further exploration
(Sorlin 2016, 2017), as fictional discourse “mirrors the ordinary
functioning of language used to mediate social interactions in everyday
life” (Sorlin 2017: 143).
The conference is open to papers which adopt a linguistic approach to
manipulative discourse through multimodal analysis, focusing on English.
Themes may include SF-MDA approaches, social semiotics or other
multimodal approaches, focusing on official or unofficial sources,
specialised areas of discourse (including, for example, political
discourse, media discourse or scientific discourse), or the use of
manipulation in genres of fiction. Other themes will be considered on merit.
Keynote speakers
Gaëlle Ferré, Professor of Linguistics, University of Poitiers
Simon Harrison, Assistant Professor of Applied Linguistics, City
University of Hong Kong
Christopher Hart, Professor of Linguistics, Lancaster University
Call for papers
We invite participants to submit an abstract (in English or French) not
exceeding 500 words, plus 5 or 6 keywords. Papers may be given in
English or French and will be allocated 20 minutes, with follow-up
questions during the session. Abstract submissions must include two
separate Word formats: one anonymised, the other containing the name(s),
affiliation(s) and email address(es) of the author(s) in addition to the
title of the paper. All abstracts will be sent for anonymous peer review
by the Scientific Committee. The Organiser and Scientific Committee
reserve the right to request modifications to the abstract as a
condition of acceptance. Parallel sessions may be used where
appropriate. Some papers will be published.
The extended deadline for submissions is Monday 3rd October 2022.
Decisions will be communicated by e-mail by Monday 31^st October 2022.
Please send all submissions with the subject “DAMMP 2023” to Robert Butler:
*Mail: (robert /dot/ butler /at/ univ /hyphen/ lorraine /dot/ fr)
<mailto:(robert /dot/ butler /at/ univ /hyphen/ lorraine /dot/ fr)>*
Scientific Committee
Robert Butler, Alan Cienki, Gilles Col, Belinda Crawford, Nuria
Edo-Marzá, Denis Jamet, Juan Carlos Palmer-Silveira, Linda Pillière,
Miguel Ruiz-Garrido, Sandrine Sorlin, Sabine Tan, Ronghua Wang, Janina
Wildfeuer, Suwei Wu
Registration
While it is anticipated that participants will be able to attend the
conference in person, a hybrid format will also enable participants to
follow the conference online. The University of Lorraine asks for a
registration fee than not less than 50 euros, whatever the format of the
conference. A website specifically for the conference will be available
shortly.
For full details, please go to:
https://idea.univ-lorraine.fr/sites/default/files/2022-03/DAMMP%202023%20-%20full%20CFP%20on%20IDEA_2.pdf
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