Hybrid Dialogues: Transcending Binary Thinking and Moving
Away from Societal Polarizations
5th ESTIDIA Conference
Global Discourses (and Counter-Discourses) of Hostility in
the Social Media Age
19-21 September 2019
Organizer: Dr. Eleonora Esposito (University of Navarra)
We invite submission of abstracts for a panel entitled
Global Discourses (and Counter-Discourses) of Hostility in the Social MediaAge, to be proposed as part of the ESTIDIA (European Society for Transcultural
and Interdisciplinary Dialogue) Conference, to be held on 19-21 September 2019
at the University of Naples L’Orientale, Italy. The fast-emerging technologies
of the participatory web have transformed the way we communicate, explore and
connect to the world forever. The new range of indigenous genres, contents and
practices, situated at the intersection of mass and interpersonal
communication, fosters the pursuit of personal interests in a shared scenario
as well as the creation and maintenance of global relations that validate and
support identities and behaviours. Not simply grounded in the incessant sharing
of information content, the social media communication paradigm is
characterized by a limitless potential for ordinary (rather than élite) media
performance, with an ever-growing number of bottom-up discourse formations and
disseminations.
Unfortunately, one of the most significant and complex
drawbacks of this unprecedented proliferation of user-generated content is the
acutely increasing incidence of cyber-hate. Hostility is a complex social,
cultural and psychological phenomenon: motives behind people’s hate are
various, different and often obscure, and the fluid nature of the cybersphere
adds to further complicate an already thorny matter. In fact, the very global,
immediate and interactive nature of the social media communication paradigm has
somehow contributed to make the participatory web a breeding ground for the
expression and dissemination of a range of exclusionary, intolerant, and extremist
discourses, practices and beliefs.
In light of the above, the proposed panel invites a selected
number of scholars from across the world to discuss the latest empirical
findings, methodologies and theoretical frameworks to understand the phenomenon
of online hostility. The panel will represent an arena to share and discuss
insights on how embedded social and power relations are organized through
digital technologies and how the phenomenon of online hostility is impacting on
equality and participation in the cybersphere.
At the same time, while the topics of online hostility,
disinformation and extremism have been receiving growing attention throughout
recent years, the potential of counter-voices on the part of individual actors
and communities has not been taken into equal scholarly consideration. This
panel aims at providing room also for research on the many emerging
counter-discourses and grassroots counter-measures against hateful and
exclusionary behaviours in the cybersphere.
Comparative studies across different languages,
socio-political contexts and social media platforms are particularly welcome.
Possible topics include, but are by no means limited to, the following aspects:
- Online Hostility as an Intersectional Phenomenon
- The intertwined impact of socioculturally constructed categorizations in digital exclusionary and abusive behaviours, such as:
-Race / Ethnicity / Religion
-Class
-Age / Generation
-Dis/ability
- Counter-Discourses to Online Hostility o Online Communities of Resistance, Resilience and Solidarity o Grassroot Initiatives for Awareness, Education and Prevention o Feminist Community-building and Digilantism o Hashtag Activism (e.g. #Metoo; #ShoutYourAbortion; #TakeAKnee; #WhyIStayed…)
- Online Misogyny and Technology-Facilitated Sexual Violence o Discursive Strategies and Rhetorical Devices of Online Misogyny o Image-Based Harassment and Visual Misogyny o Digitally-mediated Rape Culture o Misogyny against Women in Political or Institutional Roles o The Manosphere (e.g. Redpill Philosophy; Incel Communities; Toxic Masculinities…)
- Theoretical Models and Methodological Approaches o Collection and Storage of Data o Software and Tools for Data Collection and Analysis o Small and Big Data o Qualitative, Quantitative and Mixed-Method Approaches o Discourse-based and Ethnographic Approaches o Opinion Mining & Sentiment Analysis o Social Network Analysis o Ethics Issues
Abstracts are to be sent as MS Word attachment to the Panel
Organizer: onlinehostility@gmail.com
All abstracts should include the name, institutional
affiliation and email address of the author(s), the paper title, and four-five
keywords. The abstract should be approximately 500 words in length (excluding
references). All abstracts will be peer-reviewed according to the following
criteria: originality and/or importance of topic; clarity of research question and
purpose; data sources; theoretical approach; analytical focus; relevance of
findings if already available.
Submissions are due by 1 April 2019.
Notification of
acceptance to the panel will be sent by 15 April 2019.
We encourage abstract submissions from Early-Career
Researchers, including postgraduate research students and postdoctoral
researchers.
All accepted papers to the conference (following editorial
review) will be included in the conference proceedings published in
International Journal of Cross-Cultural Studies and Environmental Communication
(ISSN 2285 – 3324). It is also intended that papers accepted to the panel are
collected in a thematically arranged volume to be submitted to an international
publisher.
For more information on the panel or the conference, please
contact the Panel Organizer or visit the conference website.
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