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[Commlist] call for book chapters - Communicating Otherness Book Series - Palgrave Springer
Tue Feb 21 14:57:05 GMT 2023
*Call for Book Chapters to Edited Collection by Palgrave / Springer*
(WoS, Scopus indexed)
*/Communicating Otherness, Vol. 7 –/**/Constructions of ‘Otherness’ by
the populist right/*
*Editorial board: *
/Rui Alexandre Novais, Universidade Católica Portuguesa - CEFH, Portugal
(//(rnovais /at/ ucp.pt)/ <mailto:(rnovais /at/ ucp.pt)>/)
Rogério Christofoletti, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Brazil
(//(rogerio.christofoletti /at/ ufsc.br)/
<mailto:(rogerio.christofoletti /at/ ufsc.br)>/)/
This book is part of a six-volume international series entitled
*/Communicating Otherness/* [Luísa Magalhães, UCP & Enrique
Castelló-Mayo, USC (Editors-in-chief)]. The theme of this series is the
development of the concept of Otherness within an interdisciplinary
perspective that combines Communication Studies with disciplines across
the Arts and Humanities, Philosophy, Sociology, and Cultural Studies. We
aim at entangling this concept with the position of the Other. Hence, we
propose interpreting the process of othering from within, switching the
traditional perspectives related to the use of power (by the Self
towards the Other). In so doing, we will investigate the realm of the
Other (as transformed into an alternative Self, an object that the self
can observe, study, reflect upon) from a multidisciplinary perspective.
Vol. 7, */Constructions of ‘Otherness’ /*by the populist right assess
how the recent (re)upsurge of right-wing populism in the Western world
and elsewhere brought several discursive strategies that capitalize on
‘Othering.' In constructing their projects and (incomplete) identities
established by alterity and ‘Otherness,’ right-wing populists often
resort to distinct ways of relating to ‘Self’ and ‘Others’ to persuade
and garner future supporters and convey a particular interpretation and
understanding of social reality. They perform an enduring detoxification
and mainstreaming/normalizing of their divisive discourses through the
identification of a set of ideological enemies stemming from several
exclusionary ideas: a Manichean view of the world - between the ‘pure
people’ and the ‘evil’ or ‘corrupt elite’ and dangerous outgroups as
betrayers of the people sovereignty; the elite delimitation is also
strategically enlarged to include other unelected leaders from the
economic and cultural sectors along with the ‘arrogance of ignorance’ or
a deep-seated hatred of intellectuals and all those with progressive
values; majoritarianism complemented with institutionalized social and
political inequality, nativism, and anti-multiculturalism, among others.
Aware of the chameleonic ideational characteristic and gradational
nature of right-wing populism manifested in national and regional
peculiarities, this book aims to identify different types of ‘Othering’
and discursive construction of ‘enemies’ communicated by right-wing
populists from both the Global North and South.
Accordingly, contributions to this volume might include (but are not
limited to) explorations of populist right-wing pervasive
boundary-drawing discursive practices demarcating or dichotomizing the
functional equivalents ‘Self’ from the following ‘Others’’ as floating
signifiers:
*1-**Othering ‘upward’ the in-groups of the elites or the establishment
and those associated with the elites*
Domestic and international elites (individuals and groups); government
and/or the opposition (or both); political structures and players;
political opponents (left-wing); the state; other formal institutions of
liberal democracy such as the courts, regulatory agencies, intelligence
services, academia, culture, the press, etc.
*2-**Othering ‘downward’ by scapegoating the outgroups or excluded
outsiders *
Vulnerable and marginalized populations such as immigrants and members
of ethnonational, racial or religious groups; other minorities such as
gender identity and sexual orientation groups.
*Submission Guidelines *
-Please send either an original full chapter of up to 7,500 words,
including references, or an abstract of no more than 350 words, along
with a brief bibliography (3-5 sources) demonstrating the proposed
chapter’s theoretical foundations, and a short biography (75 words) by
*April 15, 2023*.
-Notifications will be sent to all authors as soon as the review process
terminates. Authors of approved abstracts will be asked to write
chapters of up to 7,500 words, including references, which must be
submitted by the final deadline of *July 28, 2023*.
-If you wish to submit your abstract in a language other than English,
please contact the editors. Please include “Communicating Otherness –
Vol.8” in the email subject and copy all editors on initial submissions
and any further correspondence.
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