Communication & Sport is pleased to announce a Call for
Papers for a Special Issue on “Sport Communication and Social Justice.” Now in its seventh year, Communication & Sport is a cutting-edge, peer-reviewed bimonthly journal that
publishes research to foster international scholarly understanding of the nexus
of communication and sport.
Communication & Sport publishes research and critical analysis from
diverse disciplinary and theoretical perspectives to advance understanding of
communication phenomena in the varied contexts through which sport touches
individuals, society, and culture. In 2018, Communication & Sport was the
winner of the prestigious PROSE Award as the Best New Journal in the Social
Sciences.
Communication & Sport has a current Clarivate Analytics
two-year impact factor of 2.395 and is ranked 14/83 (Q1) in the Communication
and 17/50 in Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism categories, ranking
above many longstanding legacy journals in both Communication/Media and Sport
Studies.
Detailed information about Communication & Sport.
About the Special Issue: Sport Communication and Social Justice
About the Special Issue: Sport Communication and Social Justice
Sport has long been a conduit for societal debates on
important and often contentious topics. In particular, media sport is a highly
celebrated and influential constituent of popular culture that intersects with
shifting political, economic, technological and cultural conditions (Whannel,
1992). This context creates tensions where mainstream media representations are
framed around normative ‘accepted’ production practices by dominant
organisations, which fosters an (in)visibility and marginalisation of non-normative
groups around gendered, raced, disability and sexuality dynamics. These
tensions are inexorably embedded in power, politics and issues of social
justice.
At the same time – as Bell Hooks (1990) reminds us –
marginality is not simply “a site of deprivation” but instead, it can also be
“the site of radical possibility”. Here, leading athletes from traditionally
marginalized groups have been able to seize on their visibility to highlight
issues of inequality and discrimination through innovative, mediated and highly
symbolic forms of protest, from Tommie Smith and John Carlos’s Black Power
Salute at the 1968 Mexico City Olympics to Colin Kaepernick’s kneeling protest
in 2016. Through social media, these iconic moments have started to transcend
individual athletes’ activism and communities have coalesced around hashtags
such as #takingaknee and the U.S. women soccer team’s high profile “Equal Play.
Equal Pay” campaign.
While mainstream media organizations continue to play an
important role in how these debates are framed, the emergence of new
sport/digital media has the potential to disrupt dominant relations of power,
offering renewed forms of ‘democratization’ and the prospect of meaningful
change (Hutchins & Rowe, 2012, 2013; Wenner, 2015). Within a contemporary
moment dominated by a highly commodified and corporatized media sport
landscape, marginality can itself be re-fashioned as a commodity, centered on
“celebritized” marginal subjects that can be exploited by media organisations
and global sporting corporations for marketing and public relations purposes.
For instance, consider the rainbow flag be-decked advertising campaigns from
U.S. corporations Visa and Coca Cola that surrounded the 2014 Sochi Winter
Olympics following a repressive approach against LGBT rights activists by the
Kremlin and Russian lawmakers.
Despite these memorable examples, discussions of activism,
civic agency and social change have largely been the domain of the political
sciences, sociology and political communication. Only relatively recently has
the field of sport communication began to contribute to such debates,
stimulated in part by the rapid expansion of digital and social media which has
led to new ways of communicating in sporting cultures, a new visibility of cultural
(counter / resistant) narratives, and mediated forms of democratic renewal.
Importantly, following Dart (2012), this shifting sport media landscape has led
to articulations of seemingly ‘old issues’ and cultural debates in new
relatively distinct ways, bringing to the surface /original /critical questions
in /new /emerging contexts. These are questions that focus on the nature of
power, the way in which sport media serves to uphold, challenge, contest and
negotiate dominant narratives within socio-political structures and the role
and function of representation in effecting progressive social change.
In this special issue of Communication & Sport, we
welcome theoretical and empirical inquiries that address the theme of “Sport
Communication and Social Justice” by examining the following areas and other
relevant topics:
- The emergence, resistance and contestation of new sport cultures via mainstream and alternative sport media platforms;
- The capitalization on – and exploitation of – marginalization and resistance in the context of a neo-liberalized enterprise sport media culture;
- The dynamics of public opinion and audience meaning-making with respect to sport, politics and social justice;
- The negotiation of identity politics in sport media representation; in particular, issues of (in)visibility (and resistance) of marginalized, non-normative groups who remain mostly under-represented in mainstream sport media (e.g. gender, race, disability, sexuality, etc.);
- The use of sporting platforms (media and sporting mega events) as a vehicle for social justice campaigns by activists, social movements, and other actors;
- The causes and consequences of athlete activism as symbolic protest;
- The role and function of sporting media representations (including self-representations and encounters between representations and reception practices) in addressing social justice issues;
- The role and function of non-mediated communication practices (interpersonal, group, organization) in effecting and generating social change in a sporting context.
Manuscript Submissions
Manuscripts for the special issue should be submitted
beginning June 3rd 2019 and before October 1st 2019.
In the submission process, authors should highlight in their
cover letter that the submission is for the “Sport Communication and Social
Justice” special issue of Communication & Sport and choose “Sport
Communication and Social Justice Special Issue” as the “Manuscript Type.”
Manuscripts should follow the Manuscript Submission Guidelines.
All manuscripts will be subject to peer review under the
supervision of the Special Issue Editors and Editor-in-Chief.
Expressions of interest, abstracts for consideration, and questions may be directed to the Special Issue Editors:
Expressions of interest, abstracts for consideration, and questions may be directed to the Special Issue Editors:
Dan Jackson (jacksond@bournemouth.ac.uk)
Emma Pullen (epullen@bournemouth.ac.uk)
Michael Silk (msilk@bournemouth.ac.uk)
Filippo Trevisan (trevisan@american.edu)
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