Media and uncertainty
January 7-11, 2020
Lisbon
Confirmed lecturers
Teresa Ashe,
Open University
Jointly organized by the Faculty of Human Sciences
(Universidade Católica Portuguesa), the Center for Media@Risk at the Annenberg School for Communication (University of Pennsylvania), the School of Journalism and Communication (Chinese University of Hong Kong), the Department of Media and Communications (London School of Economics and Political Science) and the
Faculty of Social Sciences (University of Helsinki), the Second Lisbon Winter
School for the Study of Communication will take a comparative and global
approach to the study of media and uncertainty across time.
Call for applications
Call for applications
The media today are troubled by uncertainty. Externally, a growing sense of uncertainty draws from
deep-seated questions about identity formation, increasing angst over the
viability of familiar cultural, political and social formations and
intensifying social and economic precarity and inequality. Ultimately, the
risks and challenges posed by climate change expose an even deeper sense of
risk, calling into question the usual cyclical social imaginations about risk,
crisis and renewal.
Within media environments, uncertainty builds from the rapid
unfolding and often unforeseen ramifications of digital technology, the
collapse of traditional business models, new degrees of irrelevance, the
emergence of new players and platforms, the development of new reception
practices, changing expectations of what media are for and a shift in the very
relationship of the media to the outside world in an era marked by widespread
dis- and mis-information.The viability of media as we know them is up for
grabs.
How and in what ways will the media – as institutions, as occupational
and professional contexts, as a diverse set of practices – adapt to this age of
uncertainty? Will the media continue to produce meaningful content, and if so
in which ways? How will the media push back against political assault? Who will
fund the media’s continued presence? Will new business models allow the media
to play a central role in democratic societies, producing investigative
journalism and relevant information on current affairs? How do we move forward
in rebuilding public trust in the media, ensuring that they help sustain some
kind of inclusive public space?How will audiences relate to and engage with
different media platforms? How will new forms of media change and disrupt
legacy media platforms? How will journalism report about uncertain and risky
futures? How will political powers be held accountable?
Questions like these fuel the imaginary that uncertainty
introduces into considerations of the media, demanding global approaches to the
different occupational, professional, economic, political, cultural and
environmental contexts in which the media operate. Thus, the Second Lisbon
Winter School for the Study of Communicationwill consider how uncertainty is
molding the media in different geographies and how societies rely on the media
to deal with moments of uncertainty.
The Lisbon Winter School invites proposals by doctoral
students and early career post-docs from all over the world that address,
though may not be not be strictly limited to, the topic of media and
uncertainty as it relates to:
- Media and digital transformation
- Emergent cultural, political and social formations
- New business models
- New notions of risk and resistance to it
- Media and uncertainty throughout history
- Online harassment
- Alternative media forms and outlets
- Media activism
- Reporting uncertainty
- Authoritarian media
- Media and political accountability
- Dis- and misinformation, fake news and hate speech
- Environmental precarity
Paper proposals
Proposals should be sent to lisbonwinterschool@gmail.com no later than July
22, 2019 and include a paper title, extended abstract in English (700 words),
name, e-mail address, institutional affiliation and a brief bio (max. 100
words) mentioning ongoing research. Applicants will be informed of the result
of their submissions by September 20, 2019.
Full paper submission
Presenters will be required to send in full papers (max. 20
pages, 1.5 spacing) by November 22, 2019.
For more information please visit the Winter School website.
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