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[Commlist] Call for applications for post-doc research on the discursive construction of peace
Fri Jun 14 03:01:08 GMT 2024
Call for applications for post-doc fellows, for research on the
discursive construction of peace.
Charles University (Czech Republic) will make a limited number of
Post-Doctoral Fellowships available, financed through its JUNIOR Fund.
Post-Doctoral Fellows will be engaged to work on a project taking no
longer than 2 years (24 months) of full-time employment. The scholarship
will be around 2400 Euro per month.
Scholarships will be awarded for projects in different thematic areas,
one of which is the "discursive construction of peace", with Nico
Carpentier as its supervisor, who is affiliated to Charles University's
Institute of Communication Studies and Journalism (ICSJ) and in
particular to the Culture and Communication Research Centre (CULCORC).
This call is for candidates who wish to work within the domain of
discursive construction of peace (from a post-structuralist
perspective), and who want to submit a credible proposal in this
thematic area. More information about the exact nature of this theme can
be found below.
Potential candidates are strongly recommended to consult with the
supervisor, Nico Carpentier (at (nico.carpentier /at/ fsv.cuni.cz)), before
submitting their final application to him.
Time table:
* Deadline for final applications sent to Nico Carpentier: July 24, 2024
* Deadline for these applications to be submitted to the Faculty: July
26, 2024
* First selection (nomination by the respective Faculties): August 5, 2024
* Second selection (University Committee): September 2024
* Decision by Rector: September 2024
* Position available from (if selected): January 1, 2025
Prerequisites (https://cuni.cz/UKEN-178.html#10):
* The applicant must be a resident of a country different than the Czech
Republic.
* Applicants of Czech and Slovak nationality are also eligible to apply
for financial support from the Fund if they have successfully completed
their doctoral studies at a non-Czech/Slovak university.
* At the time of submission the applicant must have completed Ph.D.
studies outside the Czech Republic.
* No more than 5 years must have elapsed since the completion of the
applicant’s Ph.D. at the time of filing the application. The time-limit
may be extended by the time spent on maternity or paternity leave.
* The applicant can not be qualified for an associate professorship
(habilitation) prior to the application deadline.
Charles University reserves the right not to select any candidate.
Required application documents:
(see https://cuni.cz/UKEN-178.html#10 for templates)
* Application Form (use template 1)
* Letter of Reference: written even by the supervisor in the PhD
programme or by a researcher/head of establishment, where the applicant
completed the doctoral study (use template 2).
* Professional Curriculum Vitae, including the commented list of up to 5
most important publications. Please specify your research contribution
and input to each publication (all together max. 2 pages A4)
* Copy of University Diploma or Provisional certificate of completion of
PhD studies or another official confirmation, that the applicant has
been awarded PhD Degree.
More information:
* About JUNIOR Fund: https://cuni.cz/UKEN-178.html
* All thematic areas at the Faculty of Social Sciences:
https://fsv.cuni.cz/en/exchange/academics/incoming-academics/junior-post-doc-fund
* Nico Carpentier: http://nicocarpentier.net/
* ICSJ: https://iksz.fsv.cuni.cz/en/
* CULCORC: https://culcorc.fsv.cuni.cz/
+++
Theme: The discursive construction of peace
Short summary:
With Europe being more and more confronted with armed conflict at (and
within) its borders, peace has become materially, but also conceptually
elusive, often only negatively defined—as war’s opposite—without much
substance. This project is embedded in the discursive-constructionist
approaches to war (e.g., Jabri 1996) in order to study a particular
conflict-related setting to better understand how peace is defined, as,
for instance, an unreachable utopia or a legitimation of war.
Description and intellectual context:
Although the materialist perspectives on war dominate the field of
conflict studies, Keen (1986), Jabri (1996), Mansfield (2008) and
Demmers (2012) have recognized the importance of the discursive
dimension of violence, conflict and war (Carpentier, 2017, p. 160-162).
These authors have pleaded for taking this discursive dimension
seriously, because, as Keen (1986, p. 10) wrote: “In the beginning we
create the enemy. Before the weapon comes the image. We think others to
death and then invent the battle-axe or the ballistic missiles with
which to actually kill them.” Or, as Jabri (1996, p. 23) wrote: “[…]
knowledge of human phenomena such as war is, in itself, a constitutive
part of the world of meaning and practice.” Of course, the psychological
and linguistic dimensions of war have received considerable attention,
even in some of the key theoretical conflict models, as is exemplified
by Galtung’s conflict triangle model (Galtung, 2009). But the discursive
– used here in the macro-textual and macro-contextual meaning it
receives in discourse theory (Laclau; Mouffe, 1985, p. 105; Carpentier,
2017, p. 16-17) – argues for the importance of a broader dimension,
which is located at the epistemological level.
The previous paragraph also highlights the significatory relationship
between war and peace. In particular, peace has proven to be difficult
to be conceptualized without reference to war. Biletzki raises this
point in the following terms: "'War and Peace' is the ultimate posit
which grounds the concept of peace in a dichotomous definition. In the
effort to define, explain, explicate, illustrate and finally understand
peace it is natural to ask what peace is not. […] This binary, even
exclusionary, use of both terms, ‘war’ and ‘peace’, constitutes their
meaning, almost of necessity […]" (Biletzki, 2007, p. 347). Although it
is possible to construct a language-game of peace without the signifier
war, we need to acknowledge that the signifier war is often used in
peace discourses (and the other way around). Basic definitions of war
and peace, also used in academic literature, often set up these two
signifiers in an oppositional relationship, allocating a primary
defining role to war, defining peace as “the absence of war” (or, of
armed conflict) (Matsuo, 2007, p. 16). Still, in the field of peace
studies, ample attention has been spent on developing a more autonomous
definition of peace, where, for instance, Galtung (1964; 1969) – one of
the founders of this field – uses the concept of structural violence,
which includes such conditions as poverty, humiliation, political
repression and the denial of self determination that limits the human
potential for self-realization. ‘Positive peace’ then becomes defined as
the transcendence of these conditions to assure non-violence and social
justice.
Post-structuralist approaches allow us to argue that we construct
knowledge about peace (and war) through discursive-ideological
frameworks, that are not so much located at the individual-interactional
level, but at the social level. Discourses of peace are frameworks of
intelligibility – ways of knowing peace – which are available to
individual subjects for identification (or disidentification), but that
are also inherently contingent and fluid. This does not mean that there
is a multitude of ever-changing discourses, with meanings neurotically
floating around. It means that there are several, always particular,
ways of thinking peace, which are in themselves never perfect copies of
the Real, but imperfect representations, bound to always somehow fail.
In some cases, this failure to represent – to incorporate events or
ideas – can threaten the integrity of discourse, and can, to use a
discourse-theoretical term, dislocate it. Moreover, these discourses
also engage with each other in struggles, and sometimes become dominant
(or hegemonic) and sedimented through these discursive struggles. Even
then, no hegemony is total and necessarily lasts forever; hegemonic
discourses can become politicized again and dragged into a new
political-discursive struggle, that might alter or destroy them.
This call focusses on projects that study a particular conflict-related
setting to better understand how peace is discursively constructed. This
implies that project proposals will need to (1) highlight the exact
theoretical framework (within the post-structuralist tradition) that
will be used, (2) specify and contextualize the conflict-related setting
that will be studied, (3) specify the types of signifying machines that
will be studied (e.g., news media, popular culture, memorials, art,
museums, ...), (4) describe and motivate the research questions, corpus
and research design, and methodology that will be used, (5) include a
time plan, allocating sufficient time to the academic dissemination of
the results, (6) and motivate the collaboration with ICSJ and CULCORC.
(Text from:
CARPENTIER, NICO, KEJANLIOĞLU, D. BEYBIN (2020) The Militarization of a
Public Debate: A Discourse-Theoretical Analysis of the Construction of
War and Peace in Public Debates Surrounding the Books of Three Turkish
Military Commanders on the “1974 Cyprus Peace Operation”, Revista de
Comunicação Dialógica, 3: 107-139.)
Workplace: Institute of Communication Studies and Journalism (Faculty of
Social Sciences, Charles University)
Supervisor: doc. Nico Carpentier, Ph.D.
E-mail: (nico.carpentier /at/ fsv.cuni.cz)
Applicants must submit all required documents to (nico.carpentier /at/ fsv.cuni.cz)
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