Arbeitspapier “Conceptualizing Metropolitan Journalism” erschienen

In der Publikationsreihe “Communicative Figurations Working Papers” wurde ein Arbeitspapier von Dr. Leif Kramp (Universität Bremen/ZeMKI) veröffentlicht.

Der Aufsatz trägt den vollständigen Titel “Conceptualizing metropolitan journalism: New approaches, new communicative practices, new perspectives?” und ist hier abzurufen.

Weitere Veröffentlichungen in der Reihe sind hier abzurufen.

Call for Papers: “Acting on Media”

13. und 14. Oktober 2016, Universität Bremen

In one way or the other the current transformation of society is related to media, which are understood to mean organizations, content and technologies. As a consequence, media themselves are gaining increasing relevance in political debates and for political activity per se. Actors like hacker collectives, alternative media or open source movements do not only use media to organize, collaborate and to mobilize, but explicitly center their activities on media-related questions. Pioneer communities like the Quantified Self or Makers movement have emerged as new kinds of collectivities at the crossroads between social movements and think tanks, in their support of new forms of media practice. At the same time, new initiatives critically deal with media and point to problems caused by current media appropriation. One prominent case is Repair Cafés where people maintain their devices to avoid buying new ones, pointing to the socio-ecological damage the production and disposal of media technologies cause. The number of examples that could be added to this list is constantly growing. What the actors mentioned have in common is that they tinker around with media, tease them apart, explore and modify them. They thematize how media are dominantly used in society and they often influence the way media are constructed and perceived in public discourse. Overall, by putting media at the center of their involvement, they are acting on media. Along with this development, apparently clear distinctions between ‘alternative’ and ‘established’ groups, between ‘insider’ and ‘outsider’ tactics, between ‘traditional’ and ‘new’ forms of media-related engagement become blurred. The core idea of this workshop is to bring together empirical analysis and critical reflections on different forms of acting on media.

With this focus in mind, we would like to discuss the following questions:

  • Who are the actors (individual, collective, movement-based, etc.) that thematize, problematize and/or politicize contemporary media?
  • How do actors act on media? What are their concrete aims and practices? What is their role in our social world?
  • Which contradictions can we perceive regarding these actors and media appropriation – either in the initiatives themselves or between them?
  • Which relevance and influence have and which constraints do these initiatives face in highly media-saturated societies?
  • What kind of influence and effects result from these activities/actions?

We explicitly encourage contributions from actors analyzing in different research areas and disciplines – ranging from communities, organizations, think tanks, movements, and the like – that put media in the center of their activities. Besides presentations of empirical studies, we also ask for theoretical contributions and methodological reflections on how to analyze the research object outlined above.

Weitere Informationen können hier abgerufen werden.

“Media Events and Transcultural Communication in Times of Deep Mediatization”

Prof. Dr. Andreas Hepp (ZeMKI, University of Bremen) hält Keynote beim internationalen Workshop “Media, Event and Social Theory – Transnational Challenges for Analysis” an der Universität Tampere, Finnland

Die Keynote trägt den Titel “Media Events and Transcultural Communication in Times of Deep Mediatization” und findet statt am 18. Februar 2016 um 14 Uhr. Der Vortrag wird kommentiert von Marwan Kraidy von der Annenberg School for Communication, University of Pennsylvania.

Aus der Vortragsankündigung:

“When media is used to communicate across cultures, this typically happens with reference to media events. Sports events like the Olympic Games, but also acts of war or so-called ‘terror attacks’ are examples for that. For a long time, the approach of media and communications to such media events was to describe them rather as ‘rituals’, shaped mainly by broadcasting and having some integrative power. Later, the discussion shifted focus onto their possible ‘disruptive’ character. But since then there have been further changes to our media environment. Nowadays, we live in a media manifold characterised by an interrelated multiplicity of media increasingly based on software and datafication. How can we understand media events in such times of deep mediatization? How are media events impacted when we move ever more deeply into a digitalised and datafied media environment? On the basis of recent examples, the present talk sketches some lines for rethinking media events in times of deep mediatization.”

Weitere Informationen zur Tagung können hier abgerufen werden.

“Sounds like Hamburg”

Dr. Hans-Ulrich Wagner (Forschungsstelle Mediengeschichte, Hans-Bredow-Institut für Medienforschung) hält einen Vortrag an der Universität Zürich zum Thema “Historische «Hamburg»-Radiodokumente und kommunikative Figurationen raumbezogener Identitätsbildungen”

Der Vortrag findet im Rahmen der Tagung “Populäre Musik und Identitätspolitiken: Radio machen, überliefern und rezipieren” statt, die vom 18.-20. Februar 2016 von der Forschungsgruppe Broadcasting Swissness (Universität Zürich, Universität Basel, Hochschule Luzern) in Kooperation mit dem Studienkreis Rundfunk und Geschichte an der Universität Zürich organisiert wird.

Weitere Informationen zur Tagung sind hier abzurufen.

Call for Papers: “Digital Traces in Context”

Call for Papers: “Digital Traces in Context”

Prof. Dr. Andreas Hepp, Prof. Dr. Thomas N. Friemel und Prof. Dr. Andreas Breiter (ZeMKI, Universität Bremen) geben eine Special Section der Zeitschrift “International Journal of Communication” heraus. Einreichungen sind bis zum 16. Juni möglich.

CALL FOR PAPERS
for a Special Section in
International Journal of Communication


Guest-edited by:
Andreas Hepp, Professor, Communication & Media Studies
Thomas N. Friemel, Professor, Communication & Media Studies
Andreas Breiter, Professor, Information Management & Education Technologies
University of Bremen

OVERVIEW

“Big data” has become a contested buzzword for media and communications research, but  remains a vague concept when it comes to empirical, contextualised analysis and interpretations. From the point of view of the media user and a critical analysis of media practices, it is rather “digital traces” that matter. The term “traces” puts emphasis on the fact that these data result from the practices of individuals, collectivities, and organizations while using digital media. To understand “digital traces” we have to relate them to the various actors who originate them, as well as the contexts that matter. When putting “digital traces in context,” we have to reflect the programmers who design and implement the related technologies, the features of the technologies (e.g., the underlying algorithms), the actors producing the traces through their practice, the procedures of data gathering, as well as the relation of these data with various kinds of other information. Hence, studying the context of digital traces goes beyond the mere analysis of “big data.” Investigating digital traces is a challenge for research methods (e.g., data mining, validation, research ethics, replicability, transparency), and theories (e.g., grasping general patterns, development of new theories), and a profound reflection of all of this (e.g., redefining the basis for academic critique). The aim of the Special Section is to bring scholars of media and communications research together with scholars of other disciplines to reflect the chances of researching “digital traces in context” as one way of making a  proper sense of “datafication.”

POSSIBLE TOPICS INCLUDE, BUT ARE NOT LIMITED TO:
– Theoretical approaches to digital traces and their social, cultural and technological contexts
– Qualitative and quantitative methodological approaches to researching digital traces in contextualised ways, including internal and external validation of digital traces
– Implications and affordances of system design and infrastructures for digital traces
– New ways of visualizing digital traces
– Actors defining and producing digital traces (programmers, intermediaries, users, etc.)
– Relations between social practices, behaviour and digital traces
– Critiques of digital traces producing infrastructures and social practices
– Ethical issues concerning the collecting and analysing of digital traces

FORMATTING AND REQUIREMENTS

To be considered for this collection, a paper of maximum 7,000 words (all-inclusive, which includes the abstract, keywords, images with captions, footnotes, references and appendices, if any) must be submitted by June 16, 2016 and adhere to the following formal requirements:

– Formatting according to the most recent version of the APA style-guide (including in-text citations and references).
– Any endnotes should be converted to footnotes.
– Papers must include the author(s) name(s), title, affiliation and e-mail address. (Your paper will subsequently anonymized for double-blind peer review.)
– All articles should include an abstract of 150 words.
– All spelling must be rendered in American English. To change British or Commonwealth spellings to their American equivalents, please see the Merriam-Webster Unabridged Dictionary.
– See “Author Guidelines/ Submission Preparation Checklist” at ijoc.org/index.php/ijoc/about/submissions.

Any papers that do not follow these guidelines will not be submitted for peer review.

The International Journal of Communication is an open access journal (ijoc.org). All articles will be available online at the point of publication. The anticipated publication timeframe for this Special Section is Q1 2017.

CONTACT INFORMATION

All submissions should be e-mailed to ijoc@uni-bremen.de by June 16, 2016. Late submissions will not be included for consideration.

THE TIME SCHEDULE

06/2016:
Submission of full papers

07/2016 – 09/2016:
Peer review

10/2016 – 12/2016:
Final revisions

Q1 2017:
Publication

More information