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[Commlist] CfP Special Issue on Exile Journalism - Journalism Studies
Wed Jul 05 12:24:34 GMT 2023
Call for Papers – Special Issue on Exile Journalism for Journalism Studies
Reporting from precarious shelter: The practices, values, and
epistemologies of exile journalism
https://think.taylorandfrancis.com/special_issues/journalism-exile-studies/
<https://think.taylorandfrancis.com/special_issues/journalism-exile-studies/>
Guest editors:
- Johana Kotišová (Vrije Universiteit Brussel and University of
Amsterdam) – (Johana.Kotisova /at/ vub.be) <mailto:(Johana.Kotisova /at/ vub.be)>
- Yazan Badran (Vrije Universiteit Brussel) – (Yazan.Badran /at/ vub.be)
<mailto:(Yazan.Badran /at/ vub.be)>
Deadline for full manuscripts: 1 December 2023
Rationale:
The 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine has led to a veritable exodus of
journalists and media outlets from both countries fleeing political
persecution and/or the war. A decade earlier, the Syrian uprising and
grinding conflict in the country also led to the growth of a media
sector based entirely in exile in Turkey and beyond. These are but two
prominent examples of a growing transnational community of displaced
journalists and media outlets that have continued to ply their trade—or
have been established—in the (precarious) shelter of (internal or
external) exile. Cases from Ukraine and Syria to Burma and Zimbabwe
highlight the complex and multifaceted roles played by such exile
journalism in contemporary contexts—as mediators in their own right, but
also as important nodes in the broader ecosystem of foreign reporting.
The condition of exile—in which the political aspect of displacement is
accentuated—has long been seen to shape specific imaginaries and
practices of cultural and knowledge production (whether in academia,
cinema, or indeed, journalism). Exile’s intersection with journalism,
despite its ubiquity throughout the history of the profession, has
attracted only scarce attention in the scholarship. Moreover, much of
that literature has tended to theorize journalism in exile as an
extension of activism or partisan practices, and more broadly approached
exile journalism as the marginalised, exotic Other. But if the cases
above show us anything, it is that that lens is woefully inadequate in
understanding the practices, values, and epistemologies of exile
journalism. Particularly as both the concrete condition of exile and the
field of journalism have been deeply destabilised by rapid technological
change, evolving regimes of (im)mobility and the emergence of new forms
of transnational solidarities and networks.
This special issue seeks to fundamentally shift the boundaries of the
study of exile journalism and to establish new ways of engaging with
this complex field, not least because focusing on exile journalism can
serve as a source of inspiration for journalism and its studies more
broadly. To produce knowledge with limited first-hand access to their
sources and contexts they cover, and to reach their audiences at home
and abroad, exile journalists need to be epistemologically creative.
Indeed, they often become early adopters of new media technologies and
quick in integrating them into their (networked) practices, routines,
and organisational models. We thus aim to bring exile journalism into
the core of our field as a space of professional – namely,
epistemological, and technological – innovation and experimentation.
Moreover, we see exile journalism as an extreme case of the nexus
between emotions and journalistic practice where journalists cannot
easily perform the detached and value-less role traditionally expected
of them, and often have intense ties to other actors, such as emigré
politicians or activists. This special issue thus seeks to go beyond an
a priori dismissal of the experience of involvement in what journalists
write about (a conflict, a political crisis) as a danger to (or failure
of) journalism, towards a more in-depth understanding of the
implications and practices arising from such conditions. Studying such
journalistic practices can bring journalism research closer to what
Barbie Zelizer has called real existing journalisms in the world: in
this case, openly value-laden, emotion-driven, corporeal, engaged, and
legitimately goal-oriented kind of journalism practice characterized by
porous boundaries with activism/politics.
Towards that aim we seek contributions that specifically interrogate
contemporary exile journalism and the situated (and varied) practices,
values, and epistemological frameworks that evolve in that context. We
invite contributors from a variety of geographical contexts, and we are
open to different methodological approaches including creative and mixed
methodologies. We welcome theoretical, conceptual, as well as empirical
contributions. We also welcome diverse conceptual and theoretical
approaches, including political-economic perspectives and approaches
that develop the exile-journalism nexus by integrating knowledge from
other disciplines, such as postcolonial studies, cultural and political
geography, refugee studies, sociology of migration, anthropology and
law, as well as critical perspectives in international relations and
conflict studies. In particular, we are interested in intersectional
perspectives on how the variety of identities and subject positions
(background, host country, ethnicity and race, gender, class, sexuality
and/or religious believes) shape exile journalists’ professional
practices and the experience of exile, and what diverse layers of
precarity exile journalists need to negotiate. Finally, recognising the
need to strengthen the historical dimension of the study of journalism,
we also welcome contributions on past episodes of exile journalism that
seek to historicise these experiences and their role in the development
of our understanding and theorisation of (exile) journalism.
Novel approaches to exile journalism we expect could potentially
include, but are not limited to, topics such as:
- Journalistic and knowledge-building practices in exile journalism;
- Values, norms and professional ideology of exile journalists as well
as the boundary work and boundary deconstruction performed by them;
- Emotional labour and the affective epistemology of exile journalists;
- Political economy of exile journalism focused on how exile journalists
deal with the precarity and uncertainty related to funding, innovations,
and sustainability models in exile journalism;
- Exchanges between mainstream journalism in the Global North and exile
journalism; exile journalism as a site of innovation, hybridity, and
experimentation.
Submission guidelines:
- Please make sure to choose the correct Special Issue when submitting
your full manuscripts on the article submission portal of Journalism
Studies.
- Articles should be between 6000 and 9000 words, inclusive of the
abstract, tables, references, figure captions, endnotes.
- There are no submission fees, publication fees or page charges for
this journal.
See full author’s guidelines of Journalism Studies here:
https://www.tandfonline.com/action/authorSubmission?show=instructions&journalCode=rjos20
<https://www.tandfonline.com/action/authorSubmission?show=instructions&journalCode=rjos20>
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