[Air-L] FW: CfP: Marx is Back - The Importance of Marxist Theory and Research for Critical Communication Studies Today

Charles Ess charles.ess at gmail.com
Thu Jul 21 03:50:26 PDT 2011


Dear AoIRists,
several of you will be interested in the following CFP -
charles ess

* * *

Marx is Back: The Importance of Marxist Theory and Research for Critical
Communication Studies Today

Call for Papers for a Special Issue of tripleC - Journal for a Global
Sustainable Information Society.

Edited by Christian Fuchs and Vincent Mosco



http://fuchs.uti.at/wp-content/uploads/CfP_Marx_tripleC.pdf
For inquiries, please contact the two editors.

In light of the global capitalist crisis, there is renewed interest in
Karl Marx's works and in concepts like class, exploitation and surplus
value. Slavoj Žižek argues that the antagonisms of contemporary
capitalism in the context of the ecological crisis, the massive
expansion of intellectual property, biogenetics, new forms of apartheid
and growing world poverty show that we still need the Marxian notion of
class. He concludes that there is an urgent need to renew Marxism and to
defend its lost causes in order to render problematic capitalism as the
only alternative (Žižek 2008, 6) and the new forms of a soft capitalism
that promise, and in its rhetoric makes use of, ideals like
participation, self-organization, and co-operation, without realizing
them. Žižek (2010, chapter 3) argues that the global capitalistcrisis
clearly demonstrates the need to return to the critique of political
economy. Göran Therborn suggests that the "new constellations of power
and new possibilities of resistance" in the 21st century require
retaining the "Marxian idea that human emancipation from exploitation,
oppression, discrimination and the inevitable linkage between privilege
and misery can only come from struggle by the exploited and
disadvantaged themselves" (Therborn 2008, 61). Eric Hobsbawm (2011, 12f)
insists that for understanding the global dimension of contemporary
capitalism, its contradictions and crises, and the persistence of
socio-economic inequality, we "must ask Marx's questions" (13). 



This special issue will publish articles that address the importance of
Karl Marx's works for Critical Media and Communication Studies, what it
means to ask Marx's questions in 21st century informational capitalism,
how Marxian theory can be used for critically analyzing and transforming
media and communication today, and what the implications of the revival
of the interest in Marx are for the field of Media and Communication
Studies. 


Questions that can be explored in contributions include, but are not
limited to:



* What is Marxist Media and Communication Studies? Why is it needed
today? What are the main assumptions, legacies, tasks, methods and
categories of Marxist Media and Communication Studies and how do they
relate to Karl Marx's theory? What are the different types of Marxist
Media/Communication Studies, how do they differ, what are their
commonalities?

* What is the role of Karl Marx's theory in different fields, subfields
and approaches of Media and Communication Studies? How have the role,
status, and importance of Marx's theory for Media and Communication
Studies evolved historically, especially since the 1960s?
* In addition to his work as a theorist and activist, Marx was a
practicing journalist throughout his career. What can we learn from his
journalism about the practice of journalism today, about journalism
theory, journalism education and alternative media?
* What have been the
structural conditions, limits and problems for conducting
Marxian-inspired Media and Communication Research and for carrying out
university teaching in the era of neoliberalism? What are actual or
potential effects of the new capitalist crisis on these conditions?

*
What is the relevance of Marxian thinking in an age of capitalist crisis
for analyzing the role of media and communication in society?

* How can the Marxian notions of class, class struggle, surplus value,
exploitation, commodity/commodification, alienation, globalization,
labour, capitalism, militarism and war, ideology/ideology critique,
fetishism, and communism best be used for analyzing, transforming and
criticizing the role of media, knowledge production and communication in
contemporary capitalism?

* How are media, communication, and information addressed in Marx's work?
* What are commonalities and differences between contemporary approaches
in the interpretation of Marx's analyses of media, communication,
knowledge, knowledge labour and technology?

* What is the role of dialectical philosophy and dialectical analysis as
epistemological and methodological tools for Marxian-inspired Media and
Communication Studies?

* What were central assumptions of Marx about media, communication,
information, knowledge production, culture and how can these insights be
used today for the critical analysis of capitalism?
* What is the relevance of Marx's work for an understanding of social
media?

* Which of Marx's works can best be used today to theorize media and
communication? Why and how?
* Terry Eagleton (2011) demonstrates that the 10 most common held
prejudices against Marx are wrong. What prejudices against Marx can be
found in Media and Communication Studies today? What have been the
consequences of such prejudices? How can they best be contested? Are
there continuities and/or discontinuities of prejudices against Marx in
light of the new capitalist crisis?

All contributions shall genuinely deal with Karl Marx's original works
and discuss their relevance for contemporary Critical
Media/Communication Studies.


Eagleton Terry. 2011. Why Marx was right. London: Yale University Press.
Hobsbawm, Eric. 2011. How to change the world. Marx and Marxism
1840-2011. London: Little, Brown.
Therborn, Göran. 2008. From Marxism to post-Marxism? London: Verso.
Žižek, Slavoj. 2008. In defense of lost causes. London: Verso.
Žižek, Slavoj. 2010. Living in the end times. London: Verso.

Editors


Christian Fuchs is chair professor for Media and Communication Studies
at Uppsala University's Department of Informatics and Media. He is
editor of the journal tripleC - Journal for a Global Sustainable
Information Society. His areas of interest are: Critical Theory, Social
Theory, Media & Society, Critical Political Economy of
Media/Communication, Critical Information Society Studies, Critical
Internet Studies. He is author of the books "Foundations of Critical
Media and Information Studies" (Routledge 2011) and "Internet and
Society: Social Theory in the Information Age" (Routledge 2008,
paperback 2011). He is co-editor of the collected volume "The Internet
and Surveillance. The Challenges of Web 2.0 and Social Media" (Routledge
2011, together with Kees Boersma, Anders Albrechtslund, Marisol
Sandoval). He is currently writing a book presenting a critical theory
of social media. http://fuchs.uti.at 



Vincent Mosco is professor emeritus of sociology at Queen's University
and formerly Canada Research Chair in Communication and Society. Dr.
Mosco is the author of numerous books on communication, technology, and
society. His most recent include Getting the Message: Communications
Workers and Global Value Chains (co-edited with Catherine McKercher and
Ursula Huws, Merlin, 2010), The Political Economy of Communication,
second edition (Sage, 2009), The Laboring of Communication: Will
Knowledge Workers of the World Unite (co-authored with Catherine
McKercher, Lexington Books, 2008), Knowledge Workers in the Information
Society (co-edited with Catherine McKercher, Lexington Books, 2007), and
The Digital Sublime: Myth, Power, and Cyberspace (MIT Press, 2004). He
is currently writing a book on the relevance of Karl Marx for
communication research today.



Publication Schedule and Submission



Structured Abstracts for potential contributions shall be submitted to
both editors (christian.fuchs at im.uu.se, moscov at mac.com) per e-mail until
September 30th, 2011 (submission deadline). The authors of accepted
abstracts will be invited to write full papers that are due five months
after the feedback from the editors. Full papers must then be submitted
to tripleC. Please do not instantly submit full papers, but only
structured abstracts to the editors.
The abstracts should have a maximum
of 1 200 words and should be structured by dealing separately with each
of the following five dimensions: 


1) Purpose and main questions of the paper

2) Description of the way taken for answering the posed questions

3) Relevance of the topic in relation to the CfP
4) Main expected outcomes and new insights of the paper

5) Contribution to the engagement with Marx's works and to
Marxian-inspired Media and Communication Studies



Journal


tripleC (cognition, communication, co-operation): Open Access Journal
for a Global Sustainable Information Society, http://www.triple-c.se 



Focus and Scope:

Critical Media-/Information-/ Communication-/Internet-/Information
Society-Studies

tripleC provides a forum to discuss the challenges humanity is facing today.
It publishes contributions that focus on critical studies of media,
information, communication, culture, digital media, social media and the
Internet in the information society. The journal's focus is especially
on critical studies and it asks contributors to reflect about normative,
political, ethical and critical implications of their research.


Indexing:
Scopus, EBSCOHost Communication and Mass Media Complete, Directory of
Open Access Journals (DOAJ)

Open Access:
tripleC is an open access journal that publishes articles online and
does not charge authors or readers. It uses a Creative Commons license
(Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs License) that allows reproduction of
published articles for non-commercial purposes (without changes of the
content and only with naming the author). Creative Commons publishing
poses a viable alternative to commercial academic publishing that is
dominated by big corporate publishing houses.






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