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[Commlist] CFP conference on media and religious nationalism
Tue Jun 13 21:51:40 GMT 2023
*Announcing a CMRC Conference *
**
**
*Fire on the Mountain *
*Media, Religion, and Nationalism *
**
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*The Center for Media, Religion, and Culture *
*University of Colorado Boulder *
**
*January 10-13, 2024 *
The title of this conference is not a mere play on words or a dramatic
ploy to get your attention. Nor is a reference to the threat of fire
looming far and near just a convenient metaphor to think with. There is
indeed fire on the mountain and its billowing smoke is visible
everywhere. Nationalism pervades our lived imaginaries. It is a fire
kindled by the ambers of hardened racial identities, cultural
fundamentalisms, religious extremism, and deep political polarization.
Consider the nostalgic chorus of Trump’s/Make America Great Again/and
its racial and religious overtones, the spectacular display of white
Christian nationalism during the January 6 insurrection at the U.S.
Capitol, the far-right messianism of Italian Prime Minister Giorgia
Meloni and its slogan to defend God, Country, and Family, the triumph of
Christian nationalist parties in Poland and Hungary and their xenophobic
campaigns against refugees, the increasing persecution of religious
minorities by Hindu nationalists in India, the intimate marriage between
Brazil’s Bolsonaro’s populism and evangelical Christians, the Ottoman
nostalgia and Islamic nationalism of Turkey’s Erdogan, the religious
politics of the Taliban in Afghanistan, the crackdown on Muslims by
Buddhist nationalist monks in Myanmar, the persistent Jewish nationalism
of Israel in occupied Palestine, and the alliance of Russia’s Orthodox
Church with Putin’s dark plans in the ongoing assault against Ukraine.
Nationalism has a deep history rooted in empire, territory, capitalism,
globalization, race, ethnicity, language, culture, and religion, but its
disturbing resurgence today prompts us to ask old and new questions
about its sources, the reasons behind its appeal, its rhetorical
devices, its mythological foundations, its storytellers, its mediations,
its affects, and its futures. There may be nothing inherently or
inevitably religious about nationalism, but a growing convergence of
religion, national pride, and exclusionary identity politics, while not
new, is generating arguably distinct media cultures centered on
fermenting nationalist passions and buoyed by the sophisticated
aesthetics and communicative power of a different media apparatus. We
wonder, as Mark Juergensmeyer asks, “why have limited loyalties and
parochial new forms of ethno-religious nationalism surfaced in todays’
sea of post-nationality?”, that is in a so-called ‘global world’ marked
by mass migrations, travel, transnational networks, and ease of
communication.
Religious nationalism today emerges in the context of a new media
ecology, and we will ask how we can trace the saliency, follow the
reproduction, and perhaps reveal the invisibility of this enduring
ideology and its narratives given the nature and affordances of our
pervasive and complex media environment. Put simply, this conference
probes the intimate nexus between media, religion, and nationalism. In
doing so, it also hopes to locate other pathways for the expression of
national consciousness that is unburdened by the dualism of us and them
and the toxic delirium of fetishized identity. In/Wretched of the
Earth/, the Martinican philosopher and activist Frantz Fanon warned
against a nationalism too constrained by the colonial logic of the
Enlightenment and rooted in a racialized script of exclusion and border
thinking that is endemic to nation building. Instead, he understood
national consciousness as an emergent and expiring liberatory project
that is fully committed to both the local and the transnational and a
persistent effort to find a collective future grounded in the relational
fecundity of difference, not the weaponized nostalgia of sameness. That
call against replacing one imperial supremacy with another form of
anxious supremacy should be a resonant plea at the heart of our global
crisis today.
This will be the tenth in a series of successful international
conferences held by the Center for Media, Religion, and Culture in
Boulder. The previous meetings have brought together an
interdisciplinary community of scholars for focused conversations on
emerging issues in media and religion. Each has proven to be an
important landmark in the development of theory and method in its
respective area and has resulted in important collaborations,
publications, and resources for further research and dialogue.
The conference will feature keynote lectures and roundtable
conversations, as well as thematic panels and artistic performances. We
invite papers and panels from across disciplines, intellectual
traditions, and geographic locations that engage with these questions
and beyond. Possible topics could include but are not limited to the
following:
* Coloniality, imperialism, and religious nationalism
* Nationalism, race, ethnicity, gender, and religious identity
* Religious nationalism, media, and political theology
* The global rise of right-wing populism, religion, and media
* Counter-discourses of sovereignty and self-determination
* Decolonial critiques in the study of religion, media, and nationalism
* Nation, nationalism, and globalization
* Secular nationalism “versus” religious nationalism
* Religion, nationalism, and social media
* Religious nationalism, journalism, conspiracy theories, and
disinformation
* Religion, nationalism, and transnational networks
Abstracts of individual papers and panels of 300-350 words should be
submitted (tocmrc /at/ colorado.edu) <mailto:(cmrc /at/ colorado.edu)>by July 30,
2023. Please include your email address and university affiliation in
your submission.
For questions, email Nabil Echchaibi,
Director:(nabil.echchaibi /at/ colorado.edu) <mailto:(nabil.echchaibi /at/ colorado.edu)>
Or Deborah Whitehead, Associate Director:(deborah.whitehead /at/ colorado.edu)
<mailto:(deborah.whitehead /at/ colorado.edu)>
*
*
*Conference as Glitch*
Since the beginning of the pandemic, our Center has been focusedthrough
its weekly seminar on reading about crisis and urgency, repair and
abolition, hope and resilience. We heard from scholars who asked,“why we
write and for whom”
<https://hypermediations.net/writing-in-times-of-urgency/>and listened
to artists and activists plead to slow things down, to renew with the
bliss of coalition, and to challenge our habits of assembly. In the
spirit of the call not only to notice the/fire on the mountain/and with
the sensibility of generous fellowship, we would like to extend a
similar invitation to the participants of this conference.
Do we just pretend like nothing happened and continue business as usual
now that the ugliness has been covered again? Do we simply return to the
safety and privilege of our isolated towers and pass up a unique
opportunity to turn our gathering into a real occasion for
transformative possibility? Do we resign to the intellectual
gratification of our academic conversations and remain haunted by the
inaudibility of our ideas beyond the walls of our extravagant hotels and
convention centers?
We invite you to think with us, to rehearse together, how we can remedy
the study space and scope of the Conference beyond the neoliberal
jingles of speed, relevance, visibility, and publicity, how we can
refuse the institutional tameness of our gatherings to air out the real
gasps behind our intellectual commitments, and how we can defy the lure
of the temporary fix in favor of remaking the world anew. What is the
point of conferencing in the wake of catastrophe? We must dare to ask:
what do we want from this conference? What do we want from us? The world
screams for radical departures, for gatherings that match the chaos of
the times.
This is not a nostalgic plea to return to some glorious past of the
academic conference. This is a gentle chorus to find that elusive
symphony of being ‘really’ and ‘deeply’ together for the sake of
something that far exceeds our intellectual ecstasy and is radical
enough to justify the environmental folly of our costly travels. “There
is fire on the mountain” is not a pretty slogan. It is an invitation to
go off script together.
*Confirmed Speakers:*
**
*Philip Gorski:*
<https://sociology.yale.edu/people/philip-gorski>**Professor of
Sociology and Religious Studies at Yale University. He writes on
religion and politics in early modern and modern Western Europe and
North America from a comparative historical perspective. His current
work focuses on the history and politics of White Christian Nationalism
and American Civil Religion. He is the co-author of/The Flag and the
Cross: White Christian Nationalism and the Threat to American
Democracy./
<https://global.oup.com/academic/product/the-flag-and-the-cross-9780197618684?cc=us&lang=en&>
*Raka Shome:
<https://www1.villanova.edu/university/liberal-arts-sciences/scholarship/endowed/harron.html>*The
Harron Family Endowed Chair, and Professor of Communication at Villanova
University. She writes on postcolonial cultures, transnational feminism
and nationalism as they intersect with media/communication cultures. Her
current research interests are in Asian (and non-western) Modernities,
Contemporary Indian (Hindu) Nationalism and Gender; the Global South;
Transnational Politics of Knowledge Production as a Communication
issue. She is the author of/Diana and Beyond: White Femininity, National
Identity, and Contemporary Media Culture./
<https://www.press.uillinois.edu/books/?id=p080302>////
*Ramesh Srinivasan*
<https://seis.ucla.edu/faculty-and-research/faculty-directory/ramesh-srinivasan>*:*Professor
of information studies and design media arts at UCLA and Director of UC
Digital Cultures Lab. He writes about the intersection of technology,
innovation, politics, business, and society. A Bernie Sanders campaign
surrogate and author of /Beyond the Valley: How Innovators around the
World are Overcoming Inequality and Creating the Technologies of
Tomorrow/ <https://mitpress.mit.edu/books/beyond-valley>, Srinivasan
militates for a democratic Internet and a digital bill of rights around
the world.
*Reiland Rabaka:
<https://www.colorado.edu/ethnicstudies/people/core-faculty/reiland-rabaka>*Professor
of African, African American, and Caribbean Studies in the Department of
Ethnic Studies and Founding Director of the Center for African and
African American Studies at the University of Colorado Boulder. His
books include/W.E.B. Du Bois and the Disciplinary Decadence of Sociology
<https://books.google.com/books/about/Against_Epistemic_Apartheid.html?id=bqcNngEACAAJ>/;/The
Routledge Handbook of Pan-Africanism
<https://www.routledge.com/Routledge-Handbook-of-Pan-Africanism/Rabaka/p/book/9780367488895>/;//and/Black
Power Music! Protest Songs, Message Music, and the Black Power Movement.
<https://www.routledge.com/Black-Power-Music-Protest-Songs-Message-Music-and-the-Black-Power-Movement/Rabaka/p/book/9781032184319>///
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