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[Commlist] Call for papers - Media and sexist and sexual violence. Inform, denounce, raise awareness
Mon Nov 07 15:13:21 GMT 2022
We are pleased to announce the call for papers for the conference /Media
and sexist and sexual violence. Inform, denounce, raise awareness/,
which will take place on April 4 and 5, 2023 at the University of Paris
Panthéon-Assas.
Proposals must be sent no later than December 1, 2022 to the following
address: (mediavss2023 /at/ gmail.com) <http://gmail.com><http://gmail.com>
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Argument
This symposium aims to question the role of the media in the production
of information about sexual and gender-based violence (hereafter
referred to as SGBV), which we understand as ‘a multiplicity of types of
coercive, non-hierarchical acts imposed by men to control women and any
people who do not belong to the hegemonic masculine, throughout their
lives’ (Connell, 2014; Buisson and Wetzels, 2022: 4). Thus, our approach
to violence is based on the concept of a continuum (Kelly, 1988), making
it possible to apprehend the different forms of this violence in their
plurality and to define them by the way they are linked together. Such
violence manifests itself in several forms: physical, verbal,
psychological and sexual, as well as economic and administrative. It
forms part of relationships of domination intertwined with other factors
such as race, age, social class, religion, disability, sexual
orientation and gender identity (Crenshaw, 2005; Diederich, 2006;
Direnberger and Karimi, 2019).
Over the past twenty years, many disciplines have taken up the issue of
SGBV: psychology (Salmona, 2018; Pache, 2019), law (Le Magueresse, 2012
and 2021; Moron-Puech, 2022), medicine (Jouault, 2020), political
science (Boussaguet, 2009; Delage, 2017) and sociology (Debauche and
Hamel, 2013; Le Goaziou, 2013 and 2019; Brown et al., 2020; Lacombe,
2022). Different fields have been studied, such as armed conflicts
(Audouin-Rouseau, 1994; Virgili and Branche, 2011; Cohen and Nordas,
2014), public space (Coutras, 1996; Condon and Lieber, 2005; Dekker,
2021), the family (Hamelin et al., 2010; Dussy, 2013), and work
(Baldeck, 2021).
But SGBV has rarely been discussed by researchers in terms of its media
coverage. While this question is the subject of studies abroad,
particularly in English-language research (Bullock, 2007; Charlesworth
and McDonald, 2013; Easteal et al., 2015; De Benedictis et al., 2019),
this is far from being the case within French-language research,
including in France itself. However, many dissertations in progress will
soon be extending this state of the art (Beaulieu, Buisson, Itoh,
Khemilat, Ruffio and Wetzels: see bibliography). The few existing
studies focus on the media, but this research mainly focuses on femicide
(Guérard and Lavender, 1999; Sapio, 2017, 2019, 2022) or on domestic
violence; it particularly analyzes the press, and more specifically the
daily press (Mucchielli, 2005; Hernández Orellana, 2012; Sépulchre,
2019; Lochon, 2021).
Institutions are increasingly vigilant about the role played by the
media in the visibility and prevention of SGBV: in this sense, it is
interesting to note that the Istanbul Convention, ratified by France in
2014, appeals to the ‘Participation of the private sector and the media’
in order to ‘to set guidelines and self-regulatory standards to prevent
violence against women and to enhance respect for their dignity’ (art.
17). And, in a note written by Margaux Collet in the same year for the
French High Council for Gender Equality, she emphasizes, among other
things, that it is crucial to include articles relating to acts of
violence against women in the ‘Politics’ section of newspapers, rather
than in the ‘Other news’ section; it is also inadvisable to use the
‘words of the aggressor to create a headline’ or to use expressions such
as ‘crime of passion’, a formula still very frequently found in the
regional daily press (Ambroise-Rendu, 1993; Houel and al., 2003; Sapio,
2019). For its part, in March 2019, the Committee of Ministers of the
Council of Europe adopted new Recommendation on Preventing and Combating
Sexism, noting that: ‘Another aggravating factor is where the reach, or
potential reach, of the sexist words or acts is extensive, including the
means of transmission, use of social or mainstream media and the degree
of repetition.’
The persistence of sensitive areas in media discourse – despite these
recommendations – stems, among other things, from the structural
characteristics of journalistic circles (Neveu, 2000; Damian-Gaillard
and Saitta, 2020; Damian-Gaillard et al., 2021) which are not immune to
the sexist logics of the society in which they exist. The composition of
the editorial staff, the training and the conditions of recruitment and
development of journalists are significant factors in producing
information, as shown by the results of the Global Media Monitoring
Project (Biscarrat et al., 2017; Breda, 2022). Thus, certain culturally
and historically situated journalistic practices and traditions persist.
While they are partly responsible for the propagation of hate speech and
harmful narratives about SGBV, the media also play a fundamental role in
the prevention and denunciation of the latter, by opening up spaces for
the production of ‘counter- discourses’ (Baider and Constantinou, 2019)
and responses to stigmatization, ranging from ‘destigmatization’ (Bazin
and Sapio, 2020) to ‘resignification’ (Paveau, 2020). In some cases,
journalists themselves can provide metadiscursive reflections on media
productions; this is the case with the collective known as Prenons la
Une, which endeavours to take a critical look at the problematic aspects
of journalistic writing.
Presentation of themes for papers
We are calling for proposals from different disciplines: information and
communication sciences, history, sociology, semiology, law, political
science, linguistics, and more broadly from any interdisciplinary
approach able to shed light on the production, circulation and reception
of media productions on SGBV. We thus subscribe to a broad vision of the
notion of media, focusing not only on traditional information media –
the press, television, radio, online media and other social media – but
also on all media structures as defined by Benoit Lafon (2019),
encompassing the publishing industry and exhibitions, as well as
proto-media such as posters and engravings. Please note, however, that
this call for papers relates only to informational discourse: we have
excluded fiction and entertainment from our scope. Research on music,
for example, will not be taken into account, especially since a
symposium on the subject will soon be organized. Studies analyzing the
media coverage of SGBV from a comparative perspective (international,
over time, comparing different objects/platforms and types of violence)
are welcome. Proposals can fall under one or more of the five proposed
themes.
Theme 1 – The conditions of production of media content
For this theme we call for papers that question the professional logics
at work in the visibility or concealment of SGBV within the media
industries themselves. Proposals that address this perspective may
relate, for example, to media that have built their editorial line
around SGBV, but also to services or mechanisms created by the media
industries so as to editorialize this violence: the creation of pools of
journalists dedicated to these questions, the creation of posts as
gender editors or the drafting of good practice guides and other
editorial charters. Also, the violence that takes place within media
companies themselves can be questioned, in particular by examining
emblematic case studies such as the Ligue du Lol, the Patrick Poivre
D’Arvor (PPDA) affair and the ‘Bas les Pattes’ (‘Hands off’) column
published in Libération in 2015. A more general apprehension of this
violence could enrich the reflections envisaged here. To what extent is
it visible in media industries (Beaulieu, 2019)? Is it heard and/or
addressed, and if so, by whom? What are the strategies used to fight
against SGBV in these spaces? Conversely, by what mechanisms are they
discredited or silenced? Finally, this theme will be an opportunity to
consider the vocabulary (for example, the (non)use of the term femicide)
and formats mobilized in the media field to place violence on the agenda
(such as the interactive online map of the newspaper Libération to count
femicides).
Theme 2 - Media representations of SGBV
Media discourses, whether ‘socially constitutive’ or ‘socially
constituted’ (Fairclough, 1997), are not merely illustrative of the
society that produces them but are considered in their capacity both to
consolidate and to transform the latter. In other words, ‘journalistic
writings are also social facts’ (Neveu, 2013: 64) that can reinforce
sexist stereotypes (Coulomb-Gully, 2019), fuel violence and shape – by
helping to naturalize them – stereotypical depictions of victims and
attackers. Media devices can thus become the sounding board for hate
speech defined ‘as any discursive or semiotic manifestation inciting
hatred, whether ethnic, racial, religious, or based on gender or sexual
orientation’ (Baider et al. Constantinou, 2019: 10). This type of
discourse can either be characterized by violent formulations (from
insults to verbal abuse) or it can be ‘disguised’, thus operating in a
more insidious way. Without neglecting the contributions of feminist
movements promoting, among other things, a critical scrutiny of media
representations of SGBV (Ruffio, 2019; Lamy, 2021; Noetzel et al., 2022;
Cavalin et al., 2022), we are asking for analyses of fact-based
narratives attentive to the representations of the actors involved
(victims, perpetrators of violence, witnesses, experts, politicians,
activists), to the sources used by journalists (the police, the judicial
system, local associations), to the images used and to the rhetorical
devices deployed. These include the ‘other news’ style of information on
SGBV; sensationalism; ascribing guilt to the victims; and the
euphemization and even trivialization of SGBV (Burt, 1980; Benedict, 1992).
Theme 3 - Media circulation of testimonials
Going beyond the #MeToo phenomenon already studied by French researchers
(Cavalin et al., 2022), this symposium aims to broaden the analysis of
the testimony of violence through media other than social networks:
television, radio, podcasts, cinema, press, and publishing. Who is
behind the publication of these testimonies and to what extent does
their publication contribute to the constitution of the public problem
of SGBV? Does the appropriation of testimonies by mainstream media
contribute to democratizing the subject? Does such an appropriation take
place at the cost of depoliticization? How does the voice of victims
circulate in media and cultural productions (to varying degrees of
visibility), and can we identify particular characteristics from the
profiles of the victims (public or anonymous personalities) and types of
violence? By way of example, case studies could be based on testimonials
on the radio (the Baupin case, Mediapart and France Inter [Buisson,
2022, forthcoming]); in the press (the Haenel case, Mediapart); on
YouTube (Alix Desmoineaux, reality TV candidate, for Melty), in a book
(Acquittée. Je l’ai tué pour ne pas mourir (Acquitted. I killed him so
as not to die), by Alexandra Lange), on television (Delphine Leclerc, a
victim of obstetric violence, in La Maison des Maternelles) or in a
podcast (Ou peut-être une nuit, Charlotte Pudlowski).
We invite contributors to question the specificities of media platforms
and their role in highlighting the power relations relating to SGBV
testimonies, both for the audiovisual media (seating of guests, duration
and modalities of exchanges between speakers, editing techniques,
blurring of faces) and for the press (layout, anonymization, format,
headings).
The place taken by the perpetrators of violence is also a subject for
study. How do the media use the perpetrators’ words and does this
editorial choice raise questions within the profession? Whether it is
the sequence cut from the documentary Je ne suis pas une salope, je suis
une journaliste (I’m not a slut, I’m a journalist), where Marie
Portolano confronts Pierre Menès with the sexual assault to which he
subjected her a few years earlier, or the ‘Lettre d’un violeur’ (‘Letter
from a rapist’) published by Libération the same year, what does this
tell us about editorial developments taking place within the media
industries?
Theme 4 – The mechanisms and language of prevention and awareness
The language used about the prevention and/or awareness of SGBV can
foster a critique of existing norms and promote behaviours that can
prevent and/or subvert it, but they can also function as receptacles for
these same norms, despite their initial aims. In this perspective, the
book Quand l’État parle des violences faites aux femmes (When the state
speaks of violence against women) by Myriam Hernández Orellana and
Stéphanie Kunert is an essential contribution that points out the limits
and contradictions of institutional communication in France. Based on
the analysis of a corpus of government campaigns, the authors underline
the paradoxical nature of the language used in institutional
communication where ‘women’s power to act is almost non-existent [...]
while the State, as a tutelary speaker, systematically addresses them in
the imperative (in particular by enjoining them to “break their
silence”)’ (2014: 90-91). We therefore invite contributors to extend
these observations by working on other French or foreign government
initiatives, and on institutional campaigns led by associations and
communities such as the Hubertine Auclert centre in Île-de-France. We
are also looking for work analyzing educational content dealing with
SGBV such as comics (Les Crocodiles by Thomas Mathieu and Mon vagin, mon
gynéco et moi (My vagina, my gynecologist and me by Rachel Lev) and
Instagram accounts (@stopfisha; @disbonjoursalepute), to mention just a
few examples.
There are relatively few studies of the language used to prevent SGBV
(Bruneel, 2018; Stassin, 2019; see also theme 4 of the
‘(Cyber)harcèlement’/‘(Cyber)harassment’ symposium), and there are even
fewer relating to the reception of the language and mechanisms for
preventing violence against women (Potter and al., 2011; Romero, 2020;
Sapio, 2020; Basile-Commaille and Fourquet-Courbet, 2021; Léon, 2021).
In this theme, we are also interested in media platforms and digital
mechanisms when they are mobilized within the framework of a mediation
with the perpetrators of violence, with the victims and the actors in
the field (Oddone 2020; Sapio 2023), and in the framework of restorative
justice. Recent years seem to have witnessed an increasing number of
initiatives, such as the app developed by the Marseille city hall to
fight against SGBV on the beach and the website ‘deposetaplainte.fr
<http://deposetaplainte.fr>’.
Theme 5 – The sensitive corpus of data: emotions and commitment in
research
Studying practices and media discourses relating to SGBV can place
researchers who come into contact with them in a situation of emotional
vulnerability, in some cases identified as a ‘vicarious syndrome’
(Bourdet, 2021). But what can be said and done about such emotions
experienced during research? We invite contributors to reflect on this
question by foregrounding their places as social and political subjects.
How does ‘our fieldwork, especially when it is difficult or painful,
modify us, both as people and as researchers?’ (Paveau, 2013). How can
repeated exposure to stories and images of violence affect research?
What should we do when the media language that we study revives personal
traumas? While the emotions experienced are likely to hinder scientific
reflection, they can also trigger a power to act (Paveau, 2013), an
‘emotional charge (émotricité)’ (Le Cam and Ruellan, 2017), and lead to
the development of new hypotheses for research (Dalibert, 2021). The
researcher may also not feel any particular emotions, and then feel at
odds with the social reactions that people expect in the discussion of
sensitive subjects.
In this theme, we are also interested in the place of affects in the
relationship to fieldwork, and more specifically to the corpus of data,
something much less often studied in existing research: for example in
the process of data collection, during which a feeling of guilt towards
the victims (Dussy, 2013) or sometimes one of joy (Joël, 2015) can
emerge. Finally, there is the question of the conditions for sharing
research results: how are we to talk about sensitive and gruelling data?
What place should be given to victims and aggressors? Should we
anonymize victims, or on the contrary give them a face and a name when
they are sometimes reduced to a mere statistic (Salles, 2021)? How are
we to communicate stories and images of violence without thereby
rekindling their pain (Julliard, 2021)?
Submission guidelines
Paper proposals should be sent to: *(mediavss2023 /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(mediavss2023 /at/ gmail.com)>**by* *1 December 2022.*
In order to guarantee the double-blind evaluation process, please send
us (in Word format) :
* a first anonymous document with your paper proposal of a maximum
length of 500 words (specifying the title, the axis(es) in which the
proposal fits, an abstract presenting the research question, a brief
review of the literature and/or theoretical perspectives, elements
of methodology) as well as an indicative bibliography.
* a second document specifying the title of your paper and a
bio-bibliographical note of 150 words maximum in which your name,
first name, institutional affiliation, and a brief presentation of
your research themes and main publications appear.
Notification of acceptance will be sent in mid-January 2023.
Scientific committee
* Laurence Allard (Université Paris 3 Sorbonne Nouvelle, IRCAV)
* Anne-Claude Ambroise-Rendu (Université de Versailles
Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines, CHCSC)
* Maëlle Bazin (Université Paris 2 Panthéon-Assas, CARISM)
* Laetitia Biscarrat (Université Côte-d’Azur, LIRCES)
* Laurie Boussaguet (European University Institute, Florence)
* Charlotte Buisson (Université Paris 2 Panthéon-Assas, CARISM)
* Maxime Cervulle (Université Paris 8 Vincennes-Saint-Denis, CEMTI)
* Marlène Coulomb-Gully (Université Toulouse 2 Jean-Jaurès, LERASS)
* Pauline Delage (CRESPPA-CSU, CNRS)
* Sophie Dubec (Université Paris 3 Sorbonne Nouvelle, IRMÉCCEN)
* Eric Fassin (Université Paris 8 Vincennes-Saint-Denis, LEGS)
* Isabelle Garcin-Marrou (Institut d’Études Politiques de Lyon, ELICO)
* Josiane Jouët (Université Paris 2 Panthéon-Assas, CARISM)
* Cécile Méadel (Université Paris 2 Panthéon-Assas, CARISM)
* Sandy Montañola (Université Rennes 1, ARÈNES)
* Bibia Pavard (Université Panthéon-Assas, CARISM)
* Giuseppina Sapio (Université Paris 8 Vincennes-Saint-Denis, CEMTI)
* Florian Vörös (Université de Lille, GERIICO)
* Jeanne Wetzels (Université Paris 2 Panthéon-Assas, CARISM)
Organizing committee
* Charlotte Buisson
* Maëlle Bazin
* Giuseppina Sapio
* Jeanne Wetzels
* Cécile Méadel
* Arielle Haakenstad
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