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[Commlist] CfP: What Matters? The Politics of Narrating War
Thu Sep 28 13:29:30 GMT 2023
The /Media, War & Conflict/ journal is co-hosting thisworkshop on 17 May
2024 at University of Massachusetts Lowell. The purpose is to explore
what ontological claims get made during or about war and conflict, and
the consequences of that.
Please circulate this call for papers (also available at
https://www.newpolcom.rhul.ac.uk/npcu-blog/2023/9/26/call-for-papers-what-matters-the-politics-of-narrating-war
<https://www.newpolcom.rhul.ac.uk/npcu-blog/2023/9/26/call-for-papers-what-matters-the-politics-of-narrating-war>)
and contact the organisers (below) if you’re interested in contributing.
*What Matters? The Politics of Narrating War *
University of Massachusetts Lowell, 17 May 2024
This workshop brings scholars together to investigate how governments
generate public support for foreign policy in times of war. We ask
scholars to consider a global politics of pluralist concepts and
experiences of history, entanglement, identity and other processes, and
what contestation this generates about, ultimately, what matters. By
this we mean the moral and political imperatives but also, critically,
the philosophical conceptions people hold about what “stuff” in the
world must be considered to make sense of a war, and what can be ignored.
It begins with the premise that narrations of conflict are not merely
representations /of/ the conflict itself, but also /ontologically
productive/. Political leaders and media elites’ narratives create for
their audiences novel scientific ontologies—catalogues of substances and
processes involved in the situation under investigation. These
scientific ontologies serve as mental maps and, in turn, they promote
strategic purposes, encouraging certain policy responses and
discouraging others. How do political and media actors create such maps
for audiences, and does this shape how audiences think of those
conflicts and their state’s foreign policies? How do citizens themselves
use digital media to piece together what is meaningful about a war –
what counts? Following Lerner and O’Loughlin’s recent article
<https://academic.oup.com/isq/article/67/3/sqad058/7221444>in
/International Studies Quarterly/, we refer to these narratives as
strategic ontologies. As they are continually narrated, strategic
ontologies’ innovations can shape political imaginaries and policy
preferences, often enduring beyond the context in which they are
originally formulated.
Inspired by this framework, this workshop welcomes both theoretical and
empirical contributions relating to the politics of narrating war. How
do political and media elites and all other actors – NGOs, citizens,
legal bodies, and so on – narrate what matters in a conflict? What
impacts do these mental maps or ‘strategic ontologies’ have? Further,
what ethical issues are at stake in choosing between alternative
narratives of conflict? What do differing narratives highlight and occlude?
The workshop is jointly sponsored by the University of Massachusetts at
Lowell, Queen’s University Belfast because of its longstanding research
and exchange partnerships with US universities, and the journal /Media,
War, and Conflict/, which has published over a decade of research on the
role of war narratives in both contemporary and historical cases. The
goals will be to foster dialogue about the politics of narrating war, as
well as to bring together potential contributions for a special issue.
Those interested should submit their paper’s *title and abstract *(<*250
words), *as well as a *short bio* (<*50 word*s) to the three convenors
of the workshop (contact details listed below). Funds are available to
cover some of the costs of transport and lodging for selected workshop
participants. Please indicate whether you wish to be considered for
funding of those costs.
*Deadline: 15 November 2023 *
Adam B. Lerner
Associate Professor of Political Science, Director of the Bachelor of
Liberal Arts
University of Massachusetts at Lowell
(adam_lerner /at/ uml.edu) <mailto:(adam_lerner /at/ uml.edu)>
Alister Miskimmon
Professor, School of History, Anthropology, Philosophy and Politics,
Queen’s University, Belfast
(A.Miskimmon /at/ qub.ac.uk) <mailto:(A.Miskimmon /at/ qub.ac.uk)>
Ben O’Loughlin
Professor of Politics and International Relations, Director of the New
Political Communication Unit, Royal Holloway, University of London
(Ben.Oloughlin /at/ rhul.ac.uk) <mailto:(Ben.Oloughlin /at/ rhul.ac.uk)>
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