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[ecrea] Cardiff University JOMEC Journal Special Issue
Tue Apr 26 11:03:55 GMT 2016
Due to unforeseen circumstances, some colleagues had to pull out and
we're now accepting abstracts again to be included in the special issue.
'*Diaspora beyond Nationalism' Special Journal Issue*
After the successful ‘diaspora beyond nationalism’ conference held at
the School of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies, Cardiff
University’s JOMEC Journal will publish a special issue which will
explore the themes of the conference.
The conference demonstrated how public debates surrounding migrants and
immigration are becoming increasingly contentious and issues related to
social justice are becoming more pressing. Speakers unpacked how
advancements in technology, communication and mobility in a globalised
era affect or disrupt contemporary diasporic relationship, how the
nation is imagined and what roles nationalism(s) play in diasporic
identities and relationships. Conference speakers also explored how
social change affects traditional diasporic relationships with homelands
and how inter-generational, gender, sexuality or ethnic issues may be at
play in such transformations.
These topics continue to be timely and pressing and we therefore invite
articles and book reviews that generally relate to the topic of
Diaspora, but suggested research topics might include:
· diaspora and alternative media/citizen journalism
· diaspora and globalisation
· diaspora and cultural/identity politics
· diaspora and integration/community cohesion
· diaspora and hostland relations (including politics and policies)
· diaspora and homeland relations
· diaspora and mobility/migration
To express interest, please submit an article *abstract of 250* words by
*23 June 2016* to Idil Osman on*(io40 /at/ leicester.ac.uk)* Please include a
short bio.
Best wishes,
Idil Osman PhD
Diasporic media involvement inSomali conflict
School of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies
Cardiff University
Bute Building
King Edward VII Avenue
Cardiff
CF10
------------------------------------------------------------------------
*From:* Media, Communications and Cultural Studies Association (MeCCSA)
<(MECCSA /at/ JISCMAIL.AC.UK)> on behalf of Kirsten Forkert <(kforkert /at/ GMAIL.COM)>
*Sent:* 23 April 2016 11:21
*To:* (MECCSA /at/ JISCMAIL.AC.UK)
*Subject:* BCMCR Research Seminars on 11, 18 and 25 May at BCU
*BCMCR Research Seminar: Cultural Ecologies – Cultural labour,
consumption and inequality**
1600-1800 Wednesday 11 May 2016**
P424, Parkside, Birmingham City University**
Free registration at this **link
<https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/cultural-ecologies-cultural-labour-consumption-and-inequality-tickets-24591140764>*
*
*
*Prof. Mark Banks (University of Leicester) -**/Histories of Cultural
Work: The Long Boom and Creative Opportunity/**/
/*In recent years, there has been much public discussion about
inequality in the cultural and media industries - especially in terms of
the social distribution of work and employment opportunities. Yet, while
the question of how opportunity is distributed in cultural work (and to
whom) has become more pressing, this is also an issue that has been with
us for some considerable time. The first aim of this talk, therefore, is
to place current debates and trends within their historical context. In
the 1950s, a time when cultural work began to be recognised as both
prestigious and desirable, new worlds of employment were allegedly
opening up to the mass population. But what evidence is there to support
– or refute – the claim that cultural work offered job opportunities for
ordinary people? Secondly, I want to argue that appreciating how
cultural work first came to be regarded as accessible and meritocratic
will help us to understand how it has more recently come to be seen as
divided and problematic.
*Prof. Kate Oakley (University of Leeds) - **/Culture and inequality:
tying together consumption and production/*
While inequality in cultural consumption and lack of diversity in
cultural labour markets, are both very ‘live’ topics, both researchers
and policymakers frequently fail to consider them together. The
presentation argues that doing so is vital, uses the example of Higher
Education (HE) in the UK to think through the dynamic between cultural
consumption and production. In doing so I hope to maps out a productive
possibility for a new research agenda, by sketching where and how
research might link cultural consumption and production to better
understand inequality.
*About the speakers:*
Mark Banks is a Professor in the Department of Media and Communication
at the University of Leicester. His research focuses on cultural
industries, work and employment, cultural policy, music and media. He is
currently writing about social justice in the cultural industries, the
history of art schools, black British music, and the work of freelance
dancers.
Kate Oakley is Professor of Cultural Policy at the University of Leeds.
She writes about cultural labour, policy and the relationship to place.
*
BCMCR Research Seminar: Cultural Ecologies – **Culture is bad for you:
who gets jobs and why in the creative industries****
1600-1800 Wednesday 18 May 2016**
P424, Parkside, Birmingham City University**
Free registration at this **link*
<https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/cultural-ecologies-culture-is-bad-for-you-who-gets-jobs-and-why-in-the-creative-industries-tickets-24591416589>
*
Dr. Dave O’Brien (Goldsmiths, University of London) - **/Culture is bad
for you: who gets jobs and why in the creative industries/**/
/*This paper considers the social stratification of Cultural and
Creative Industries (CCIs). It begins with an analysis of the /2014 ONS
Labour Force Survey/, which suggests entrenched and widespread
inequalities in the most ‘ cultural' and artistic parts of CCIs. The
paper then accounts for these inequalities using a case study of acting,
an ideal type cultural occupation. Acting has an important status within
the circuits of British cultural life. The profession is a mixed
economy, in keeping with many other areas of the arts sector in the UK.
However, it also transcends a series of boundaries and hierarchies,
cutting across popular and elite cultures and across art forms. The
paper suggests the key cleavage within the profession relates to social
mobility and its relationship to ethnicity, gender and age. In keeping
with other research on the cultural and creative industries the paper
reports narratives of precariousness within the profession. Crucially
the paper identifies how this precariousness is manifested through
access to the profession, to incomes within the profession and the
sustainability of professional life for those from less privileged
backgrounds. Finally the paper offers reflections on how objective and
embodied forms of social stratification, such as the relationship
between social class, accent and wealth, are marginalised within actors
narratives of their talent and their ability to ‘make it’ in an industry
that prides itself on openness, diversity and merit whilst, in reality,
being nothing of the sort.
Dave O'Brien is a senior lecturer in cultural policy. He is also the
host of the new books in critical theory podcast
<http://newbooksincriticaltheory.com/> and writes regularly for a
variety of media outlets. Follow him on twitter @drdaveobrien
<http://twitter.com/@drdaveobrien>
His research currently covers five areas: cultural policy, urban policy,
public administration, cultural value, and creative industries. These
themes are captured by a range of recent and on-going projects,
including: the role of cultural intermediaries in the creative economy
<https://culturalintermediation.wordpress.com/>; the impact of visual
arts on people living with dementia
<http://dementiaandimagination.org.uk/>; a literature review of cultural
value and inequality; a social network analysis of early career artists
<http://www.creativeworkslondon.org.uk/creative_voucher/q-art-and-city-university-london/>;
social mobility and class in the acting profession;comparative
evaluation techniques
<http://connected2.sittingcircle.co.uk/index.php/project/valuing-different-perspectives/>;
urban regeneration; and the experiences of early career researchers.
<https://earlycareerresearchers.wordpress.com/>
*
*
*
BCMCR Research Seminar: Cultural Ecologies – **Conceptualising the
Production Culture of Religious Television**/
/**1600-1800 Wednesday 25 May 2016**
P424, Parkside, Birmingham City University**
Full abstract at this **link*
<http://www.bcmcr.org/research-events/cultural-ecologies-conceptualising-the-production-culture-of-religious-television/>*
Free registration at **this link
<https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/cultural-ecologies-conceptualising-the-production-culture-of-religious-television-tickets-24756420119>
**
**Nur Kareelawati Abd Karim (Universiti Sains Islam Malaysia) -
**/Conceptualising the Production Culture of Religious Television/*
This research aims to conceptualise the production culture of religious
television. It examines the factors shaping the production culture of
the Islam Channel, a religious television broadcaster based in central
London, and the extent to which these factors affect the quality of
working life of employees involved in the production of a magazine talk
show. Combining participant observation and interviews with textual
analysis, it analyses the complex ways in which television production
workers adapted to the resource and ideological constraints within the
production culture of the channel. Ideological constraints, which
develop into a ‘culture of caution’ among television production workers
affects their creative autonomy and emotional well-being. The research
examines how religion shapes the production culture of religious
television programming and changes the ways in which television
production employees perceive their positions and manage their emotions
in their everyday working lives.
Nur is a lecturer at the Universiti Sains Islam Malaysia and a doctoral
research candidate at the School of Media and Communication, University
of Leeds, UK. Her thesis aims to conceptualise the production culture of
religious television. ‘Production culture’ is a concept coined by John
T. Caldwell (2008), which is often used by western scholars to explore
film and TV production in a non-religious media environment. Nur’s
research therefore seeks to fill in the gaps in both research into media
industries and the field of religion, media and culture. She adopted
ethnographic research approaches to study the production quality of a
magazine talk show and the quality of working life of television
production workers at the Islam Channel in Central London. Her 7-year of
experience working in the media (Astro All Asia Broadcast Centre) is
another factor that motivates her to pursue her career in academia since
2009.
/
Note: Nur will be joining us by Skype. //
/
For any queries or further information contact Kirsten Forkert at
(kirsten.forkert /at/ bcu.ac.uk)
<https://owa.bcu.ac.uk/owa/redir.aspx?C=kiI58H3oYUqorD0amy1aWIZ7kHjbcNMIgGmCotNrnId8lCdKd9aw4Oy6gKF7MXpqY3MCI4kApkI.&URL=mailto%3a%2520kirsten.forkert%40bcu.ac.uk>
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