University of Leeds
11-13 January 2017
Theme: Culture, Media, Equality and Freedom
Deadline for proposals: **Please note that the ‘call for papers’ is now closed**
Equality and freedom are key political aspirations of modernity, from the French Revolution to the Arab Spring and beyond. Culture, media and communication (including film, television, publishing, music, digital and social media) are now central to the pursuit of these goals, and to dynamics of power and control. The conference theme provides the opportunity for MeCCSA to focus on issues of political justice in the context of our field and we invite papers that consider the complex relationship between different forms of media and communication, the circumstances in which they are produced, distributed and consumed, and the consequences for the realization of different forms of equality and freedom at local, national, regional and global levels. Papers might address the following questions, among others:
- How do contemporary media and culture promote or inhibit the pursuit of freedoms?
Which freedoms should be valued and why? - In what ways do contemporary media and popular culture reflect, represent and re-shape inequality and constraint?
- In what ways might the pursuit of putative ‘freedoms’ (for example in neo-liberal media policy or environmental policy) potentially serve to reinforce inequalities (such as ongoing digital divides or the unequal impacts of environmental change)?
- How do audience interactions with different media affect the realization of freedoms and the contestation of inequalities?
- How do different freedoms and inequalities affect the ways in which media forms interact with other dimensions of culture?
- How do different cultural, geographical and political contexts influence the role played by media in the pursuit of different freedoms, as well as the outcomes of their involvement?
- Which kinds of theory might best allow us to understand contemporary and historical struggles over liberty and justice in the media, popular culture and beyond?
We also welcome scholarly papers, panels, practice contributions, film screenings, and posters across the full range of interests represented by MeCCSA and its networks, including, but not limited to:
- Film and television studies and practice
- Radio studies and practice
- Cultural and media policy
- Representation, identity, ideology
- Social movements
- Digital games studies
- Women’s media studies
- Disability studies within media studies
- Approaches to media pedagogy
- Children, young people and media
- Diasporic and ethnic minority media
- Political communication
- Methodological approaches
- Practice
We actively support the presentation of practice-as-research, in particular when there is insufficient time to present a complete work during parallel sessions. We are therefore providing dedicated presentation spaces to display practice artefacts including screenings, computer-based and multi-screen work (where possible). For displaying practice work, please include specific technical data (eg duration, format) and an URL pointing to any support material when submitting your abstract.
Abstract submission
Abstract submission is now closed.
Individual abstracts should be up to 250 words. Panel proposals should include a short description and rationale (200 words) together with abstracts for each of the 3-4 papers (150-200 words each including details of the contributor), and the name and contact details of the panel proposer. The panel proposer should co-ordinate the submissions for that panel as a single proposal.