Call for Papers
 
"Culture and Computer-mediated Communication:
Toward New Understandings"
Special issue of the
Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication:
 
Guest editors:
Charles Ess ([email protected])
Interdisciplinary Studies Center, Drury University
 
Fay Sudweeks ([email protected])
School of Information Technology, Murdoch University.
 
 
IMPORTANT DATES
 
Proposals due: October 1, 2004
Full papers due: April 15, 2004
Anticipated publication: January 2006
 
Gert Hofstede¹s oft-cited dimensions of culture, along with
Edward T. Hall¹s frameworks for understanding culture and
communication (including his distinctions between ³high
content/low context² and ³high context/low content²
cultures, and between polychronic and monochronic
perceptions of time) have emerged as methodological starting
points for a considerable range of empirical research into
how far extant CMC technologies succeed or fail in fostering
cross-cultural communication online.
 
At the same time, these frameworks can be challenged in a
variety of ways. First of all, such frameworks inherit the
risks and difficulties surrounding the notion of ³culture²
in general. Too often, our efforts to define cultural
characteristics assume a static and largely
hermetically-sealed notion of culture ­ one that is, in many
instances, operationally assumed to coincide with membership
in a given nation-state or group defined by a specific
geographical boundary. Moreover, the efforts of cultural
theorists such as Hofstede and Hall to analyze and define
culture lead to generalizations that run the risk of falling
into overly simple stereotypes and binary oppositions. By
contrast, more careful reflection on ³culture² should reveal
that whatever else we mean by the term, cultures are fluid,
not static; members of different cultures constantly
intermix, hybridize, and develop their own distinctive
collocations of diverse cultural elements. Moreover, given
the complexity of human beings and their identification with
multiple cultures and subcultures, it is by no means clear
how far such characterizations as ³high content/low context²
and ³high context/low content² are adequate explanations of
human behavior.
 
For this special issue of the Journal of Computer Mediated
Communication, we invite submissions that explore (a) the
utility and limits of Hall¹s and Hofstede¹s and related
frameworks for CMC research, and/or (b) alternative
frameworks for researching culture that explicitly seek to
move beyond previously identified weaknesses and limits in
Hall and Hofstede, et al., and that result in fruitful and
insightful findings as regards CMC.


SUBMISSION PROCEDURES
 
Potential authors should submit a preliminary proposal of
500 words by October 1, 2004, to the issue editors Charles
Ess ([email protected]) and Fay Sudweeks
([email protected]).
 
The proposal should indicate (a) the theoretical bases
and/or earlier research results to be used in analyzing,
critiquing, and moving beyond Hall¹s and related frameworks
of cultural analysis, and/or (b) alternative frameworks of
cultural analysis, to be used for specific empirical
research whose goal is to test the fruitfulness and/or
limits of these frameworks, as applied to one or more types
of CMC (e.g., the Internet, the Web, and/or mobile
communication). In addition, proposals should clearly
indicate the data to be analyzed, the methods used, the
actual or anticipated findings of the empirical analysis,
and the implications of these findings ­ including how the
findings may confirm and/or point to limitations of the
cultural framework(s) used in the analysis.
 
Proposals should demonstrate awareness of key references in
the culture and communication debates . For potentially
useful sources, prospective authors may want to review one
or more publications related to the conferences on Cultural
Attitudes Towards Technology and Communication [CATaC], for
example, Macfadyen et al. (2004); see also the CATaC website
at http://www.it.murdoch.edu.au/catac/.
            
Since JCMC is an interdisciplinary journal, authors should
plan for papers that will be accessible to non-specialists,
and should make their papers relevant to an
interdisciplinary audience. In addition, judicious use of
the multimedia possibilities of web publication are
encouraged, e.g., screen shots, photos, etc.
 
Earlier submissions and questions are welcome.
 
Authors whose proposals are accepted for inclusion will be
invited to submit a full paper of roughly 7,000-10,000 words
by April 15, 2005.
 
Anticipated publication date for the issue is January 2006.
 
Proposals and final submissions should be e-mailed to the
special issue editors Charles Ess ([email protected]) and Fay
Sudweeks ([email protected]).
 
 
Reference:
Macfadyen, L. P., Roche, J., and Doff, S. (2004).
Communicating across Cultures in Cyberspace: A
Bibliographical Review of Online Intercultural
Communication. Hamburg: Lit-Verlag.


CONTACT:

Charles Ess
Distinguished Research Professor
Interdisciplinary Studies
Drury University
900 N. Benton Ave.
Springfield, MO 65802
USA
Voice: +1 (417) 873-7230
Fax: +1 (417) 873-7435
Email: [email protected]
Home page:  http://www.drury.edu/ess/ess.html
Co-chair, CATaC: http://www.it.murdoch.edu.au/catac/



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