[Air-L] CFP: Youth, Media, and the Politics of Change in North Africa

Lina Khatib linakhatib at yahoo.com
Fri Jul 1 05:29:22 PDT 2011


Middle East Journal of Culture and Communication

Special Issue Call for Papers:

Youth, Media and the Politics of Change in North Africa: Negotiating Identities,
Spaces and Power

Guest Editor: Loubna H. Skalli (American University, Washington D.C.)

This special issue of the Middle East Journal of Culture and Communication
solicits theoretical and empirical papers on “Youth, Media and the Politics of
Change in North Africa: Negotiating Identities, Spaces and Power.”

The purpose of this special issue is to document ways in which the Maghreb
countries of North Africa (Morocco, Tunisia, Algeria and Libya) provide vibrant
and complex settings for studying the dynamics of change, creativity, and
continuity as these societies continue to adjust to the current security,
demographic and development challenges.

The uprisings that brought down the Tunisian and Egyptian dictators in
January 2011 began with the dramatic public suicide of Mohammed
Bouazizi, a 26-year-old university-educated man no longer allowed to make a
living as an “illegal” street vendor. Bouazizi’s tragic death has
humanized the struggles of today’s young men and women, and has revealed their
capacity to engage with forces of change in peaceful, creative and unexpected
ways.

The Maghreb has a large cohort of young men and women with increasingly high
levels of education, unemployment, and political marginalization. Yet, more
than any prior generation, youth are engaged today in negotiating the pressures
of globalization and the logics of localization at the socio-cultural, economic,
political and individual levels. Maghrebi young men and women are invariably
seeking to create new spaces of participation within their societies and
communities. They are already positioning themselves in the local/global spaces
of knowledge production, information and communication exchanges and circulation
of different cultural/media forms of expression. As recent developments in the
region demonstrate, youth are redefining their gendered identities and
transforming the socio-cultural, political and communication landscapes of the
region in profound, complex and interesting ways.

For this issue, we solicit theoretical and empirical papers with single country
or cross-country analysis related to the following areas:

*Youth, activism and social media;
*Negotiation of gender/identities in an era of securitization and neo-liberal
globalization;
*Expressive identities through cultural/media forms:
music (Hip Hop), television, theatre, film, and other artistic forms;
*The emergence a new generation of cultural/media entrepreneurs and their
redefinition of the cultural/media landscapes in the region;
*Emerging spaces for re/defining challenging gender norms and values;
*Gender, virtual communities and social networks (blogs, e-diaries, journals
etc);
*New/old media and emerging forms of political expression, participation and
mobilization;
*Diaspora, generational dynamics and identities, opportunities and constraints
(institutional, ideological, financial, etc) that arise from creating new
cultural/media spaces and redefining old ones.

Deadline for submission of abstracts: July 8, 2011.

Abstracts should not exceed 500 words. Please explain your contribution to this
special issue: provide a clear description of the proposed approach, the
theoretical framework and empirical data (single country or comparative).

Notification of acceptance of abstracts: July 15, 2011

Deadline for submission of complete manuscripts: January 15, 2012.
Papers should be between 6000-7000 words long and include an abstract of 150
words that clearly defines the focus of the article. Provide 5 keywords to
identify the article.

All papers will go through the standard peer-review process and will be accepted
or rejected based on the quality of their contribution to the special issue.

Expected publication date of accepted articles is 2012.

Please email your abstract to Dr Loubna H. Skalli: Hanna at american.edu

MEJCC is a peer-reviewed journal published by Brill. http://www.brill.nl/mjcc


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