UPDATE: Media and Globalization (1/1/02; 5/10/02-5/12/02)

From: Anita Jean Chan (anita1@MIT.EDU)
Date: Fri Nov 09 2001 - 11:34:42 EST

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    MIT Comparative Media Studies

    CALL FOR PAPERS

    Media in Transition: globalization and convergence, an international
    conference

    conference date: 10-12 May 2002
    abstract deadline: 1 January 2002

    Terms such as “globalization” and “convergence” increasingly dominate
    discussions of our media environment, yet their meanings remain vague and
    context specific. Many factors make it difficult to make broad statements
    about these trends: The uneven flow of cultural products across national
    borders, the still nascent nature of the new media environment,
    unpredictable patterns of use and meaning among media consumers, diverse
    national histories of cultural exchange or isolation, an unstable business
    climate which alternately encourages and discourages innovation and
    entrepreneurship.

    Many core issues remain to be explored: Will globalization reduce or
    expand the world's cultural diversity? Will new technologies empower
    international media makers to enter the American marketplace or leave them
    more exposed than ever before to U.S. cultural exports? How do we
    reconcile the competing forces of media convergence and media
    fragmentation that are shaping the current communications infrastructure?
    What patterns can we discern among convergent content and audiences across
    media forms and international borders? What are the implications of media
    convergence not only at the corporate level, but also at the grassroots
    level where users are in control of content, context, and flow?

    Two years ago, MIT hosted the first Media in Transition conference,
    bringing together an international array of scholars from many different
    disciplines to examine the process and consequences of media change. This
    year, we invite you back to MIT for the second Media in Transition
    conference. As in the first conference, we encourage reflection across
    disciplinary boundaries, and among theorists and practitioners -- a
    citizenly discourse makes core ideas accessible to a broad public.

    Focusing especially on North American, European and Asian experiences, the
    conference will provide a platform for a historically and culturally
    comparative analysis of our media past, present and future.As in the first
    Media in Transition conference, presentations and multi-media
    demonstrations will be framed by plenary “conversations” in which
    distinguished panelists will speak briefly and then participate in
    extended dialogue with the audience.

    We solicit papers on all aspects of media in transition, including:

    changing peripheries and centers
    world music-- world media
    news and information in the digital age
    the internet, policy and popular culture
    transnational political activism
    cultural disorder: regional censorship and trans-national media
    unofficial cultures, cultures of resistance
    cultural authority/autonomy/markets
    historical precedents/precursors
    global media flows, local media meanings
    intellectual property: constructions, enforcements, implications
    cyber citizenry and the global public sphere
    digital culture: language and infrastructure
    convergence and fragmentation
    public service vs the marketplace: traditions, histories and futures
    building a global base for local media production
    global fusion and hybridity
    "The Third Culture" -- identity in an age of dislocation
    the globalization of the media audience
    re-examining "the global village"
    the transformation of television
    narrative forms and cultural change

    Abstracts and short biographical statements should be sent no later than
    1 January 2002 to:

    R. J. Bain
    Comparative Media Studies
    14N-207
    Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    Cambridge, MA 02139
    USA

    email: cms@mit.edu

    The conference will be held at MIT from 10-12 May 2002.

    Please visit the web site from the previous Media in Transition
    conference:
    http://web.mit.edu/m-i-t/conferences/m-i-t/

             ===============================================
             From the Literary Calls for Papers Mailing List
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