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[Commlist] CFP: Experiencing Participation
Mon Nov 28 17:36:32 GMT 2022
*CFP: /Experiencing Participation/*
Special issue editors: Professor Birgit Eriksson, Professor Carsten
Stage and Postdoc Tina Louise Hove Sørensen, Aarhus University, Denmark
This special issue of /Conjunctions. Transdisciplinary Journal of
Cultural Participation/ invites contributions that explore the
experiential dimensions of participation as they unfold across social
practices, cultural sectors and disciplines.
According to Christopher Kelty, participation relies on individuals who
contribute to a collective, but Kelty also criticizes how participation
– not least in an era of social media – is 1) increasingly
instrumentalized to obtain certain goals and 2) too focused on
aggregating individual contributions, not on enabling a truly collective
process to unfold. In that way participation has become synonymous with
the strategic use of accumulated individual actions and disconnected
from a profound experience of taking part in meaningful collectives
where the sum is greater than the parts. Based on his historical
studies, Kelty describes the experience of participation as “something
more than individual” and as “both individual and collective at the same
time” (Kelty, 2019, 18).
From a different, and mainly empirical, angle, Ellie Brodie et al
(2011) have researched how and why people participate. By examining this
from the perspective of individuals and exploring how and why their
participation begins, continues or ends, they argue that sustained
participation depends on the quality of the experience of participation,
including the extent to which participants “feel they are making a
difference and having an impact, whether they feel their contribution is
valued, and the quality of the social bonds with other participants”
(Brodie et al, 2011, 6).
The special issue aims to empirically and theoretically explore the
experience of participatory processes and the complex interplay between
participation and experience. What (if any) are the differences between
the experience of participating in something bigger like a concert
audience or crowd, and the experience of a shift in power balance and
influence? Or between invited or self-organized participation (Cornwall
2008)? How does the experience of participation change over time? How
are various experiences of participation linked to each other – does
repeated experiences of participation for instance create expert
participants? And what are the difference between participatory
experiences taking place in e.g. a museum, political movement, local
neighborhood or social media public?
We invite empirical, theoretical, methodological and practice informed
contributions that address the question of how participation is
experiential. Articles can address (but are not limited to) the
following topics:
* The experience of participation in various practices, contexts and
sectors
* Potential differences between the experience of participation and
other types of collective experience
* Spaces and atmospheres of participation
* Negative experiences of participation and/or citizen involvement
* Participation fatigue
* Methodological challenges of and approaches to exploring
participation as experience
* Affect theoretical approaches to participation
* The implications of approaching and evaluating participation as an
experiential term and process
* How particular experiences can spur participatory engagements
The overall focus of the journal is to explore the socially
transformative and democratic potential of cultural participation
processes, to qualify the academic understanding of what ‘participation’
is and what it involves, and to discuss the complex relations created
between user-generated processes and established institutions and
discourses.
Please submit an abstract of max 500 words presenting the core
argument(s) of your paper. Abstracts must be submitted to the issue
editors (on (norcs /at/ cc.au.dk) <mailto:(norcs /at/ cc.au.dk)>, (aekbe /at/ cc.au.dk)
<mailto:(aekbe /at/ cc.au.dk)>(oraesttls /at/ cc.au.dk) <mailto:(aesttls /at/ cc.au.dk)>).
If your abstract is accepted, and you are asked to submit a full paper,
we may ask you to contribute to the issue publication process by
(double-blind) peer-reviewing another paper submitted to the issue.
Timeline:
Deadline for abstracts (max. 500 words): February 1, 2023
Notifications of acceptance: February 15, 2023
Deadline for articles: August 10, 2023
Online submissions: https://www.sciendo.com/journal/TJCP
<https://www.sciendo.com/journal/TJCP>
About the journal: https://sciendo.com/journal/TJCP
<https://sciendo.com/journal/TJCP>
Any questions related to this special edition can be sent to:
Birgit Eriksson ((aekbe /at/ cc.au.dk) <mailto:(aekbe /at/ cc.au.dk)>),Carsten Stage
((norcs /at/ cc.au.dk) <mailto:(norcs /at/ cc.au.dk)>) or Tina Louise Hove Sørensen
((aesttls /at/ cc.au.dk) <mailto:(aesttls /at/ cc.au.dk)>)
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