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  • 15.12.2023 07:24 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Media & Jornalismo (Vol. 24 N.º 45, 2024) 

    Deadline: March 15, 2024

    Editors: 

    Maria José Brites - Universidade Lusófona, CICANT; maria.jose.brites@ulusofona.pt

    Teresa Sofia Castro - Universidade Lusófona, CICANT; teresa.sofia.castro@ulusofona.pt

    Paloma Contreras-Pulido - Universidade Internacional de La Rioja (UNIR); paloma.contreras@unir.net

    Topics:

    • Children, youth, and news
    • Children, youth, and contexts of digital citizenship

    Subtopics:

    • Algorithms and datafication
    • Audiences and news
    • Socialisation, families, and peer influence
    • News literacies
    • Information disorders
    • News resistance and avoidance
    • Theoretical reflection and future perspectives of the field
    • Methodological discussions
    • Participatory media
    • Decolonization of the field
    • Glocal news contexts
    • Glocal digital citizenship contexts

    In this special issue, we aim to capture theoretical and empirical reflections that shed light on how, why, and where young people follow, understand and express what is currently happening in the world in the context of digital citizenship and information disorders (Wardle & Derakhshan, 2017). The COVID-19 pandemic and recent wars accelerated a torrent of fake news and other information disorders (Galan et al., 2019, Frau-Meigs et al, 2017), in which social media platforms revealed underlying ambivalences. This is why it is so pressing to consider diverse approaches in the investigation that identifies what, how and where young people from diverse contexts and geographies propose their views and expressions of what is happening in the world. By anticipating normative and/or decolonised definitions of news, we aim to apprehend research that assesses themes related with youth voices and views of the world, their (dis)connection with news and contexts of digital citizenship.

    The research continually points to a shift from the traditional journalism environments to new opportunities for consumption and production (Clark and Marchi, 2017), fostering participative processes. By proposing the concept of “connective journalism”, Clark and Marchi (2017) highlight the need for sharing, having a self-view of the news stories, and considering making their stories. They also note a disruption between young audiences' needs and news outlets.

    What are the social environments where these processes are grounded? Even if the peer group influence has an impact, family, and in particular parents, are at the centre of the socialisation process for seeking news and different views of the world (Brites et al., 2017; Edgerly et al, 2018a; Lemish, 2007; Silveira, 2019), including contexts for operating digital devices (Edgerly et al, 2018a). Self-socialization is found in other studies regarding youth information consumption: incidental and leisure (Boczkowski et al, 2018) and news avoidance and resistance (Brites e Ponte, 2018; Edgerly et al, 2018b).

    These sociocultural environments pose additional challenges to news brands and the production of stories that fit young people’s interests and expectations. It is thus imperative to reflect on these timely issues, namely considering how young people regard and deal with algorithms (Swart, 2021), algorithmic literacy, and what are the implications for information selection and consumption processes in their everyday lives, and even to observe how in some cases this content is used for participatory, prosocial and citizen purposes, shaping initiatives that promote social change.

    This special issue [under the project Youth, News and Digital Citizenship - YouNDigital (PTDC/COM-OUT/0243/2021); https://youndigital.com] invites articles that theoretically and/or empirically tackle these and other dimensions, considering youth layers in terms of social, educational, gender, and cultural diversity, which demands to be studied and analysed within their relationship with digital media, news, platforms, and digital citizenship.

    IMPORTANT DATES

    • Deadline for submitting articles: March 15, 2024
    • Review process: March-June 2024
    • Editors' decision: July 2024
    • Expected publication date: October 2024

    Authors must indicate the special issue to which they are submitting the article.

    Revista Media & Jornalismo (RMJ) is an open-access peer-reviewed scientific journal that operates in a double-blind review process and is indexed in Scopus. Each submitted work will be distributed to two reviewers previously invited to evaluate it, according to academic quality, originality, and relevance to the objectives and scope of the theme of this edition of the journal.

    Articles can be submitted in English, Spanish, or Portuguese.

    Manuscripts must be submitted through the journal's website (https://impactum-journals.uc.pt/mj). When accessing RMJ for the first time, you must register to be able to submit your article and accompany it throughout the editorial process. Consult the Instructions for Authors and Conditions for Submission.

    For more information, contact: patriciacontreiras@fcsh.unl.pt

  • 15.12.2023 07:17 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Journalism Practice

    Deadline: January 5, 2025

    Guest Editors:

    • Allen Munoriyarwa

    Department of Media Studies, University of Botswana

    Department of Communication and Media, University of Johannesburg  

    •  Mathias-Felipe de-Lima-Santos

    Faculty of Humanities, University of Amsterdam

    Digital Media and Society Observatory (DMSO), Federal University of São Paulo (Unifesp)

     Deadlines: 

    Abstract Submission: January 5th , 2024

    Paper Submission: June 30th, 2024

    Expected Publication Date: Q4 2024 – Q1/2025

     In recent years, the integration of artificial intelligence (AI) technologies in journalism and media production has sparked a global transformation in the way information is gathered, produced, and disseminated (de-Lima-Santos & Ceron, 2021). The term AI broadly refers to a field of computer science methods “dedicated to replicating human intelligence" (Broussard et al., 2019, p. 673). These technologies offer new possibilities for enhancing news gathering, content generation, audience engagement, and data analysis. Furthermore, they possess immense capabilities and offer incredible promises of transformation to media and journalism. Moreover, the AI-driven journalism landscape has witnessed a remarkable boom in the development and utilization of generative AI technologies, such as ChatGPT and DALL-E (Gondwe, 2023). The surge of generative AI has had a profound impact on news production, where AI algorithms can generate articles, summaries, and even assist in investigative reporting. These technologies have provided easy to use tools for media organizations in creating content at scale, automating repetitive tasks, and enhancing data analysis. While AI-driven journalism has garnered substantial attention and analysis in different media landscapes, there is a growing recognition of the unique implications, challenges, and opportunities posed by AI in the news industry worldwide (Broussard et al., 2019). This special issue aims to fill this knowledge gap by exploring the appropriation of AI technologies in news production across different media contexts.

    The application of AI in different regions brings with it a set of complexities that necessitate in-depth investigation. For example, previous research has indicated that media professionals’ inclination toward AI skepticism in Africa is influenced by concerns about potential job cuts, the expenses associated with such deployment, inadequate training, ethical dilemmas surrounding these emerging technologies, and doubts regarding its effectiveness in the democratic process (Munoriyarwa et al., 2021). Conversely, Latin American practitioners hold mixed feelings, with both optimistic and pessimistic views about the application of AI in journalism. However, they mostly perceive such tools as an opportunity rather than as a threat (Soto-Sanfiel et al., 2022). Within this rich tapestry, media and journalism play vital roles in shaping societies, enabling civic engagement, and reflecting the voices of marginalized communities across the world. The significant influence of AI deployment, as shaped by the dynamics among platforms, governments, and media, is also noteworthy worldwide. This power dynamics could lead to more influential actors gaining control over media production and information dissemination, consequently impacting the media ecosystem (de-Lima-Santos et al., 2023; Kuai et al., 2022).

    Understanding the nuanced landscape of AI-enabled journalism requires considering a range of crucial factors. These include the vast linguistic diversity, with hundreds of languages spoken, making language processing and content personalization a unique challenge (Gondwe, 2023). Cultural sensitivity is paramount, as news and information production must respect the values and norms of diverse societies, often vastly different across the world (Kothari & Cruikshank, 2022). Furthermore, each region faces specific challenges related to media sustainability, including economic constraints, political pressures, and issues of representation. While AI has the potential to address some of these challenges, its application is far from uniform (de-Lima-Santos et al., 2021). Local news ecosystems, for instance, play a vital role in their communities, and understanding how AI can strengthen local journalism while maintaining cultural relevance is of utmost importance.

    This special issue seeks to shed light on these intricacies, explore the impact of AI on journalism and media moving beyond “North” and “South” dichotomy, and delve into the challenges and opportunities that arise of AI in news context. While countries in the Global North can actively experiment with AI solutions in their newsrooms (Jones & Jones, 2021; Pashevich, 2018; Stray 2021;), those in the Global South are often either playing catch-up or simply acting as recipients of the experiments conducted by these Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich and Democratic (WEIRD) nations. Thus, this special issue also aims to address the pressing concern of the “AI divide” across these regions, discussing the unequal access to AI technologies and knowledge, which can exacerbate existing (news production) inequalities within countries and across geographies. This can impose additional constraints on the global expansion of emerging technologies within the news media  (Jamil, 2020). Understanding and mitigating this divide is a central concern, and this special issue will be a platform for scholarly inquiry and debates into these critical areas from a global perspective.

    With an eye on bridging gaps, promoting inclusivity, and narrowing the AI divide, this special issue seeks to gather research and insights that can inform the future of AI-enabled journalism within the “North” or the “South” in socioeconomic and political terms. We invite contributions that address but are not limited to the following themes in the context of the AI and journalism:

    • AI deployment: Comparing the development of AI technologies in newsrooms worldwide.
    • Generative AI: Leveraging this technology across the entire news value chain, transforming traditional processes and enhancing various aspects of news production, distribution, and consumption, while also necessitating careful consideration of ethical, human, and editorial implications
    • AI tools for news production: Exploring the use of AI technologies in newsrooms, including automated content generation, sentiment analysis, and fact-checking.
    • Ethical and societal implications: Examining the ethical considerations and societal impacts of AI-driven journalism in culturally and politically diverse regions.
    • AI for media sustainability: Examining innovative AI applications that promote sustainability in media organizations, revenue models, and content creation.
    • AI and indigenous knowledge: Investigating how AI technologies can promote or affect indigenous knowledge and cultural heritage in media coverage.
    • AI for disaster reporting: Analyzing the use of AI tools in disaster reporting, early warning systems, and response efforts in disaster-prone regions.
    • Audience engagement and personalization: Investigating AI-driven strategies for audience engagement, content personalization, and the role of AI in addressing language diversity.
    • Media capture and democratization: Analyzing the influence of AI on media capture, control, and the democratization of information in the Global North and South.
    • Platforms dependence: Analyzing the influence of platforms on AI deployment in the news industry.
    • AI, censorship, and freedom of expression: Assessing the impact of AI on freedom of expression, censorship, and surveillance in politically sensitive environments.
    • AI and local news ecosystems: Understanding the potential of AI in strengthening local journalism and addressing issues of representation.
    • AI in investigative reporting: Exploring the application of AI in investigative journalism, data mining, and open-source intelligence.
    • AI in fact-checking: Exploring the application of AI in fact-checking practices.
    • AI and data-driven storytelling: Investigating how data journalism is advancing worldwide and the role of AI in helping these practices, such as extracting, analyzing, and visualizing data.
    • AI and health communication: Exploring the use of AI applications in health journalism, pandemic coverage, and the dissemination of public health information.
    • AI and environmental and humanitarian communication: Exploring the use of AI applications in environmental journalism, climate crises, and humanitarian action.
    • AI literacy: Investigating the role of AI literacy in the context of technological innovations and its impact on newsrooms.
    • AI and inclusivity: Exploring how AI technologies can enhance or suppress media inclusivity and accessibility for underserved communities, including issues of language, accessibility, and representation.
    • AI divide: Addressing disparities in AI access, knowledge, and impact in the Global South in comparison to Global North/Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich and Democratic (WEIRD) countries.
    • AI and power: AI and power dynamics in newsrooms
    • AI and journalistic role: Global perceptions of journalistic roles in the age of AI
    • AI and representations: Exploring how AI represents North-South newsrooms, journalism, and media.

    We look forward to receiving your contributions and exploring the dynamic intersection of artificial intelligence and journalism.

    Follow the link here for more details: https://bit.ly/GenerativeAIAgeJournalism. 

    Please feel free to reach out in case of any questions.

  • 13.12.2023 12:36 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Communication & Society (Special Issue)

    Deadline: January/March/July

    Guest Editors Sandra L. Borden (Western Michigan University) Lluís Codina (Universitat Pompeu Fabra) María José Ufarte (Universidad Castilla-La Mancha)

    Ethics is an area of increasing interest as the field of communication confronts new challenges brought on by the emergence of Artificial Intelligence (AI). AI is ushering in a new era of transformation for journalism and media content (Pavlik, 2023), while algorithms are increasingly determining editorial decisions (Porlezza, 2023), and content selection (Trattner, Jannach, Motta, et al., 2022). For this reason, Communication & Society will devote an annual special issue throughout 2024 to examine the implications from a dual perspective. First, AI has major ethical challenges. On the other hand, the potential impact of AI on production processes and practices in the field has yet to be fully explored.

    Beyond the examination of particular AI tools and applications, this call for papers endeavors to make a contribution to the continuous discussion on essential and overarching concerns that could impact communication firms, clients, groups and audiences. In essence, it is about understanding the potential ethical and deontological challenges and issues that could have an effect on a diverse array of practices, production procedures, workflows and regulations for media journalists, audio-visual creatives, and marketing professionals. We are also interested in studies on the reception of AI news and contents by audiences.

    Topics of interest include, but are not limited to, the following:

    - Ethical foundations for the use of artificial intelligence technologies in the communication sector.

    - Ethics, generative AI, and bias.

    - Ethical implications for regulation, policy, and the use of AI in communication.

    - Algorithmic literacy for communication studies.

    - Generative AI and intellectual property / copyright issues.

    - Audience habits and reception Studies: audience engagement and AI.

    - AI in persuasive communication: advertising, PR, and marketing.

    - Implications of AI for credibility in public communication and election campaigns.

    - AI implications for public opinion and political communication.

    - Creativity and AI: scriptwriting, photojournalism, art direction, cinematography,

    graphics, post-production, soundtrack...

    - Fake news and deepfakes: social media, truth and AI.

    - Using AI for fact-checking.

    - Professional challenges for communication professionals and AI: new products,

    recruitment profiles and routines.

    - Sustainability as a factor for ethical communication and AI.

    - The impact of artificial intelligence on media policy.

    - Quality vs. quantity in platform catalogs: AI, personalization and sustainable policies

    in audiovisual content production. - Uses of AI in media management.

    Paper submission deadline

    Submissions will be accepted throughout the year. AI-related papers will be published in three consecutive issues: April, June and October. Articles should be submitted at least three months in advance of each issue to allow for the full peer review process. Authors should indicate in the “Author's Comments” section that the article is intended for this annual monograph in 2024.

    Proposed articles must adhere to the journal’s style standards, which can be found at the following link: https://revistas.unav.edu/index.php/communication-and-society/about/submissions

  • 12.12.2023 21:35 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Edited by: Lisa Parks, Julia Velkova, and Sander de Ridder

    Media backends--the electronics, labor, and operations behind our screens--significantly influence our understanding of the sociotechnical relations, economies, and operations of media. Lisa Parks, Julia Velkova, and Sander De Ridder assemble essays that delve into the evolving politics of the media infrastructural landscape. Throughout, the contributors draw on feminist, queer, and intersectional criticisms to engage with infrastructural and industrial issues. This focus reflects a concern about the systemic inequalities that emerge when tech companies and designers fail to address workplace discrimination and algorithmic violence and exclusions. Moving from smart phones to smart dust, the essayists examine topics like artificial intelligence, human-machine communication, and links between digital infrastructures and public service media alongside investigations into the algorithmic backends at Netflix and Spotify, Google’s hyperscale data centers, and video-on-demand services in India. 

    A fascinating foray into an expanding landscape of media studies, Media Backends illuminates the behind-the-screen processes influencing our digital lives. 

    Contributors: Mark Andrejevic, Philippe Bouquillion, Jonathan Cohn, Faithe J. Day, Sander De Ridder, Fatima Gaw, Christine Ithurbide, Anne Kaun, Amanda Lagerkvist, Alexis Logsdon, Stine Lomborg, Tim Markham, Vicki Mayer, Rahul Mukherjee, Kaarina Nikunen, Lisa Parks, Vibodh Parthasarathi, Philipp Seuferling, Ranjit Singh, Jacek Smolicki, Fredrik Stiernstedt, Matilda Tudor, Julia Velkova, and Zala Volcic

    https://www.press.uillinois.edu/books/?id=p087462

  • 12.12.2023 21:28 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Edited by: Stephen Coleman and Lone Sorensen

    This thoroughly revised second edition Handbook examines the latest knowledge and perspectives on digital politics. Through new content on digital populism, filter bubbles, algorithmic power, AI, non-Western digital politics, election communication regulation and right-wing alternative news media, contributors challenge the binary of cyber-optimism and cyber-pessimism and argue for a more nuanced understanding of political change.

    Arranged around key themes, this Handbook investigates the meaning of digital politics and analyses the impact of new technologies and platforms on politics. Chapters consider the digital reconfiguration of civic practices, political institutions and journalism. Leading scholars provide original, incisive and provocative insights into cutting-edge issues, exploring how the expansion of digital technologies, channels and styles shapes political dynamics.

    Providing a broad and in-depth overview of digital politics, this Handbook will be an invaluable resource for researchers, educators and students of politics, media and communication studies, journalism, technology and governance. It will also be essential reading for political practitioners, policy-makers and strategists seeking to better understand the digital world.

    Link: https://www.e-elgar.com/shop/gbp/handbook-of-digital-politics-9781800377578.html

  • 12.12.2023 21:23 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    June 30-July 4, 2024

    Christchurch, New Zealand

    The International Association for Media and Communication Research (IAMCR) is pleased to announce the opening of the submission platform for its 2024 conference, to be held from 30 June to 4 July in Christchurch, New Zealand. Hosted by the University of Canterbury, the conference welcomes submissions in the fields of media and communication research from now until 7 February 2024. The central theme for 2024 is "Whiria te tāngata / Weaving people together: Communicative projects of decolonising, engaging, and listening," inspired by a Māori proverb about strength through common purpose.

    IAMCR invites abstracts for its various thematic sections and working groups, as well as for two special segments: Flow34 and Pitopito kōrero. Flow34 focuses on academic audio/visual work, such as podcasts and videos that creatively integrate academic and aesthetic dimensions. Meanwhile, Pitopito kōrero is a special strand for short videos on the conference theme. While most of the conference will be in-person only, Flow34 and Pitopito kōrero are open for members who cannot attend the event in Christchurch.

    The abstract submission system is now open, with a deadline set for 7 February 2024, at 23:59 UTC. Abstracts should be between 300 and 500 words, with a maximum of two submissions per author. The Flow34 proposals consist of an academic description and a basic script of the audio/visual work, with a maximum length of 750 words. Pitopito kōrero has a different procedure for submissions

    The University of Canterbury, hosting the event, is renowned for its Media and Communication program, including Māori strategic communication. Christchurch, the host city, is noted for its blend of colonial heritage and modern architecture, rebuilt following earthquakes a decade ago. The event will take place at Te Pae, a new conference centre on the banks of the Avon river.

    For more details and to submit your abstract, please visit the IAMCR 2024 conference website at https://christchurch2024.iamcr.org

  • 12.12.2023 21:19 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    April 17-18, 2024

    Babeș-Bolyai University, Romania

    Deadline: March 1, 2024

    The Faculty of European Studies – Babeș-Bolyai University Cluj-Napoca, the Centre for Academic Succes – BBU, The Centre for African Studies – BBU, The State University of New York at Cortland and The University of Johannesburg, have the pleasure of announcing the organization of the 4th edition of the international conference Crisis Communication and Conflict Resolution, which will be held on April 17th-18th, 2024.

    In crisis situations, effective communication and conflict resolution strategies are important aspects that cannot be disregarded. In order to address these challenges, this international conference aims to support academics, researchers, PhD and postgraduate students by offering them an opportunity to present their latest research results in the fields of:

    • Crisis and Risk Communication
    • Conflict Transformation and Resolution
    • The United Nations and Conflict Resolution,
    • The European Union and Conflict Resolution
    • Dealing with Ethnic and Religious Conflicts
    • Political Communication
    • Institutional and Corporate Communication
    • Environmental Communication
    • Mass-media Communication
    • Discourse Analysis
    • Education and Learning
    • Mediation in International Conflicts

    The 2024 edition will be held in a hybrid format, both on-site and via virtual. Accepted papers will be published in a post-conference volume (e-book with ISBN).

    Supporting journals: Synergies Roumanie

    Studia Europaea UBB

    Conference languages: English and French  (Appel à communications)

    Venue: Faculty of European Studies (1 Em. de Martonne St., Cluj-Napoca, Romania)

    Participation fees:

    • virtual participation – free of charge
    • on-site participation – 50 EUR (50% discount for students)

    Important deadlines:

    • March 1st, 2024 – deadline for title and abstract submission
    • March 7th, 2024 – notice of acceptance
    • October 2024 – deadline for final paper submission

    All paper proposal forms (LINK) should be submitted to both e-mail addresses below:

    delia.flanja@ubbcluj.ro & laura.herta@ubbcluj.ro

    Organizing committee:

    Assoc. Prof. Dr. Delia Pop-Flanja – BBU

    Assoc. Prof. Dr. Laura-Maria Herța – BBU

    Assoc. Prof. Dr. Adrian-Gabriel Corpădean – BBU

    Prof. Dr. Bhaso Ndzendze – UJ

    Prof. Dr. Alexandru Balaș – SUNY Cortland

    Prof. Dr. Sergiu Mișcoiu – BBU

    Assoc. Prof. Dr. Paula Mureșan – BBU

    Lect. Dr. Elena Grad-Rusu – BBU

    Lect. Dr. Roxana-Maria Nistor – BBU

    Assist. Dr. Ramona Alexandra Neagoș – BBU

    Dr. Andreea-Bianca Urs – BBU

    Dr. Gianina Joldescu-Stan – BBU

  • 12.12.2023 21:07 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Editors: María-Cruz Negreira Rey, Jorge Vázquez-Herrero, José Sixto-García, Xosé López-García


    https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-031-43926-1

    The book Blurring Boundaries of Journalism in Digital Media: New Actors, Models and Practices was recently published in its online edition by Springer Nature. The work was edited by Novos Medios researchers María-Cruz Negreira-Rey, Jorge Vázquez-Herrero, José Sixto-García and Xosé López-García and seeks to address the blurring boundaries that define contemporary journalism from various perspectives. The book brings together the contributions of 42 authors from 23 universities and eleven countries: Spain, Portugal, Italy, Brazil, Argentina, the Netherlands, Austria, Finland, Sweden and the United Kingdom.

    The volume is composed of 19 chapters, which are structured in six sections to address the principles of journalism today, sustainability strategies in the digital context, tensions between old and new players, the evolution of formats and narratives, adaptation to the mobile scenario and social media platforms, or the changes introduced by artificial intelligence.

    The publication of the book is part of the activities of the R+D+i project Digital native media in Spain: strategies, competencies, social involvement and (re)definition of journalistic production and dissemination practices (PID2021-122534OB-C21). The work is a continuation of previous titles published in Springer, which also addressed a multifaceted approach to the conceptualization and evolution of digital journalism: Total Journalism: Models, Techniques and Challenges; and Journalistic Metamorphosis: Media Transformation in the Digital Age.

  • 12.12.2023 10:18 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    27 – 29 September 2024

    Zakynthos, Greece

    Deadline: March 31, 2023

    https://dstfestival.org

    The Greek Island of Zakynthos (Zante) constitutes a spot in time and space where the convergence of diverse sociocultural narratives takes place: Hugo Foscolos, Andreas Kalvos, Dionysios Solomos (national poet of Greece), and Andreas Vesalius are amongst the island's most notable cultural figures.

    With that in mind, four Laboratories from three Greek Universities (National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, University of the Aegean, Ionian University) have collaborated to organise the biannual International Digital Storytelling Festival (DST-Zakynthos)1, between the biannual DST conferences.

    DST-Festival celebrates the art of digital storytelling. DST-Festival is expected to constitute a space where the diverse community-driven digital stories can be communicated to the broader community, shared, and critically reflected upon by experts (artists, scientists, medical doctors etc.) and by the Festival participants (DST creators or not).

    The 1st International Digital Storytelling Festival “We, The story” (DST-Zakynthos 2024) will be hosted by the "Foskolos" multi-purpose hall (https://cinefoskolos.gr).

    DST-Zakynthos 2024 comprises a competitional and a non-competitional part. The competitional part of Festival is organized in six themes:

    • Culture

    • Education

    • Environment

    • Health

    • Science – Research

    • Society

    Each creator may compete to any competitional theme (maximum two DSTs per creator in total).

    Who can contribute with a DST to the Festival? DST is characterised by the creator’s truth, a personal narrative, crucially differing from a video clip or a short film. We accept any DST created within an acknowledged institution, organization etc. (accompanied with a respective verification Letter), or an Independently created DST (accompanied with a Letter briefly explaining the process of its creation). Each submission includes the DST (with the respective Letter), an Authorisation Letter (that the DST may be showed in public), and a Letter of Commitment (that the DST may be included in the Festival programme), payment of the handling fees (15 euros per DST). Detailed information about the procedures of entering the DST festival competition may be found at https://dstfestival.org, while queries may be sent to info@dstfestival.org.

    Considering the non-competitional part, this year, the Festival will host a special session devoted to Greece, entitled “hiStories across the topos and the chronos.”

    Furthermore, in parallel with the Festival, DST-workshops will be organized by DST-specialists for those who wish to experience the process of DST creating.

    We invite you to join DST-Zakynthos 2024!

    Michail Meimaris Professor Emeritus, President of DST-Zakynthos 2024

    Important dates

    • Submissions: 01 March 2024 – 31 March 2024
    • Decision to contributors: 30 April 2024
    • Registration: 30 April 2024 – 31 May 2024

    Organised by:

    – Zakynthos Club For UNESCO

    – Laboratory of New Technologies in Communication, Education and the Mass Media, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

    – Mathematics, History, Philosophy and Didactics of Mathematics Laboratory, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

    – Learning Technology and Educational Engineering Laboratory, University of the Aegean

    – Interactive Arts Laboratory, Ionian University

    Co-Organised by:

    – Region of Ionian Islands

    – Université Paris 8

    – MICA - Université Bordeaux – Montaigne

    – University of Lapland

    – Chaire UNESCO ITEN

    – MSc Global Health-Disaster Medicine, Medical School, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

    – EU Jean Monnet Chair in Humanitarian Medicine and Response in Action (2020-2024)

    – The Greek Film Archive Foundation (Tainiothiki Tis Ellados)

    – StoryCenter (USA)

    – Pilgrim Projects (UK)


    Prior to the International Festival, two national DST festivals have taken place in Greece:

    • “When 01 meets narration: Digital stories” at the Greek Film Archive Foundation (9-10/12/2017, Athens)
    • “When 01 meets the Storytelling: Discussions and digital stories” (17-18/3/2018, Zakynthos)
  • 07.12.2023 21:34 | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    June 26-28, 2025

    University of Graz, Austria

    Deadline: February 20, 2024

    CALL FOR PAPERS

    What is critique? What can Critical Theory do for society? Which forms of critique may claim any relevance in late capitalism? How can a critical public opinion manifest itself in the 21st century? How can we distinguish critique from political ideologies and conspiracy theories? (see Fridays for Future, Querdenker, etc.) What characterises critical thinking? How can radical thought be rendered practically relevant?

    The conference Theories and Concepts of Critical Theory takes place between 26 and 28 June 2025 at the University of Graz, and it approaches its main theme from various theoretical and practical perspectives. Based at the Faculty of Humanities, this interdisciplinary conference constitutes the second stage of the interdepartmental research project Radical Thought in the Anthropocene. The conference follows on from a first event that took place in 2023 and which was dedicated to different disciplinary approaches to Critical Theory.

    We will bring the concept and idea of critique into productive constellations with a variety of concepts and categories pertaining to social and cultural theory. In doing so, and by highlighting fundamental societal and existential challenges of the 21st century, we will reflect upon the possibilities and potentials of a productive critique of society, especially concerning its implications for academic theory and lived practice. In view of the great global, societal, ecological and economic challenges, we will put to the test the social significance and practical relevance of cultural and social theory in the 21st century.

     Keynotes

    • Rodrigo Duarte, Belo Horizonte, Brazil

    • Lydia Goehr, New York City, USA

    • Sven Kramer, Lüneburg, Germany

    • Michael Thompson, New York City, USA

    Conference Board (University of Graz)

    • Stefan Baumgarten, Department of Translation Studies

    • Stefan Brandt, Department of American Studies

    • Juliane Jarke, BANDAS Center & Department of Sociology

    • Susanne Kogler, Department of Art and Musicology

    • Sonja Rinofner-Kreidl, Department of Philosophy

    Format

     The conference is held in a workshop format. Incoming abstracts will be assigned to the following three corresponding themes:

    • Workshop I: Language, Translation, Society

    This workshop compares and contrasts diverse forms and concepts of critique and communication, examining their viability in view of current societal challenges such as multiculturalism, multilingualism, migration and modern communication technologies. Amongst other things, we will address cultural readings and language-specific receptions of the first generation of the Frankfurt School, especially concerning their historicity, timeliness and their ‘afterlife’. We will also pay special attention to ideology critique and to critical approaches on technology. Further relevant categories include phenomena such as inter- and transculturality, deconstruction and text, medialisation and multimodality, globalisation and (digital) cultures as well as gender-specific issues.

    • Workshop II: Materialism, Aesthetics, Politics

    The question surrounding (artistic) ‘material’ concerns one of the key themes associated with Theodor W. Adorno’s aesthetic theory. It is also of central importance regarding the current reception of Critical Theory. Such questions surrounding the status, nature and conceptualisation of the material world not only challenge the Marxist origins of Critical Theory but also its concrete political and practical relevance. In this workshop, we will compare and contrast approaches in Critical Philosophy and Critical Social Theory, as well as approaches pertaining to (Historical) Materialism and (Neo-)Idealism. Of particular interest here is the relationship between New Materialisms and Critical Theory. Further relevant topics include (world) literature, digitalization and mediatisation, art and freedom (from ideology), (artistic) activism and politics.

    • Workshop III: Humans, Spirit, World Relation

    This workshop deals with the relationship between science and critique. Here, the role of the Humanities for critical thinking and the role of lived practice with positive future implications will be debated from self-reflexive and self-critical standpoints. Among other things, we will discuss in what ways scientific and academic thought echoes conceptualisations, theories and arguments from Critical Theory, and how science might be able to adapt them for a better life, for a radical “wild thinking” that may generate alternative realities, art worlds, even anarchist constellations. Dichotomous thinking, post- and transhumanist ontologies as well as Anthropology and History are further possible themes. The relationship between critique, reason and unreason, as well as between critique, indignation and resistance about the state of (world) social affairs will also be up for discussion.

    We look forward to receiving abstracts (max. 300 words) for 20-minute presentations on the above- mentioned topics and themes by 20 February 2024 under radikalesdenken(at)uni-graz.at. We are particularly looking forward to receiving contributions from doctoral candidates and early-career researchers! The abstracts must be submitted in anonymised form in English including a mini- biography (approx. 100 words).

    The Conference Board will accept abstracts based on an anonymous selection procedure. Acceptance letters will be sent out in spring 2024. The conference will be streamed online. Selected contributions are expected to be published in English by Palgrave Macmillan.

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