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Call for Publications

Theme: The Cultural Deliberation of Europe
Publication: Continuum. Journal of Media and Cultural Studies
Date: Special Issue
Deadline: 25.8.2022

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The question of what and where “Europe” is, and who belongs to it,
has long been a topic of discussion. This concept has a long and
complex conceptual history, ranging from more or less exclusive
geographical and political definitions and articulations,
postcolonial redefinitions and contestations, and as a frame of
reference related to but distinct from national and local identities.
A comparable complexity holds for those social subjects identified as
“Europeans.” In this special issue, our focus is on the
multilayeredness of the concepts of “Europe” and “Europeanness” and
the ambiguities inherent to definitions of these two concepts in
order to conceptualize and interrogate the problems and processes of
“a thousand Europes” or a “European multiplicity” (Rumford and
Buhari-Gumez, 2014).

The conversations over these (self-)definitions are traditionally
understood as unfolding in the public sphere. Here, citizens come
together to discuss politics and negotiate matters of common concern
– including the question of what it means to be a “European” and what
“Europe” means. Ever since Jürgen Habermas’ seminal work The
Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere (1962), much attention
has been paid to the “hard” forms of public deliberation by focusing
on the role of the news, and later social, media, as well as
institutional political bodies.

In debates responding to Habermas's proposition of “the public
sphere,” the notion of a monolithic site where political deliberation
takes place has been challenged. Alternative conceptualizations of
the public debate on issues of common concern that have been proposed
include counterpublics (Fraser, 1992; Warner, 2002), “dominant” and
“hidden” scripts (Scott, 1992), or “capillaried networks” in which
discussions are “taken up” across domains (Hamilton and Cowling,
2020). This special issue continues in this direction and aims to
make visible those counterpublic or “hidden” deliberations about
Europe and Europeanness notably in the so-called “off-stage” areas of
the public debate.

For this special issue, we are especially interested in such
counterpublic debates within the cultural domain – itself a site not
always considered as part of the public sphere. Firstly, we are
interested in how cultural counterpublics articulate definitions of
Europe and Europeanness through the arts and culture as alternative
propositions posed by political elites in the dominant public sphere.
Our understanding is that within the cultural field, art, literature,
and other aesthetic cultural forms should be considered as key sites
of political position-taking. This position-taking becomes part of
political deliberation through the mediated circulation, or passing
on of these arguments, during which the arguments may transform as
they pass through different media and genres (cf. Gal, 2006; and
Couldry and Hepp, 2016). Secondly, we also aim to understand how
these counterpublic deliberations create a public of Europeans thanks
to the circulation and take-up of these cultural forms (cf. Warner,
2002).

This special issue therefore seeks to explore specifically the
aesthetic and semiotic means and processes through which contemporary
and historical cultural forms (think of literature, film, and the
fine arts, but the list is not exhaustive) carry and mediate
deliberations on and claim-making processes about Europe and
Europeanness. We invite contributions from a range of perspectives –
including but not limited to that of cultural sociology and cultural
critique – to trace and explore, analyse and explain how cultural
texts become topics of wider social and political discussions
concerning Europe and Europeanness and to explicate what these texts
contribute to the public deliberation about the meaning of the
concepts of “Europe” and “Europeanness.” Topics to be discussed could
include, but are not limited to:

- Analysis of artistic, cultural, and textual contributions to
  political debates on and about Europe/Europeanness, in
  medium-specific or material ways;
- Transformations and interpretations of local or national identities
  as Europe(an)s;
- Construction and negotiations of (European) publics through and by
  means of the mediated circulation and “take-up” of cultural forms as
  political deliberation;
- Intertextual transformations and incorporations of cultural and
  textual artefacts as political debates as discussions circulate and
  move across borders of all kinds (national, genre, language, etc.);
- Cultural institutions and their contributions to Europeanizing
  public discourse;
- Art and cultural criticism as part of public deliberation
  (specifically concerning Europe).

Practical details

Proposals including an abstract (200 words max.) and a short
biographical note (100 words max.) are due on 25 August 2022. Send
your abstract and biographical note to Jesse van Amelsvoort
(j.d.vanamelsvo...@uva.nl) and Margriet van der Waal
(m.c.van.der.w...@rug.nl). 

The editors of the special issue will notify authors of acceptance or
rejection by the end of August. The editorial board of Continuum will
consider proposed special issues in September, after which we will
get in touch with those whose proposals have been accepted as part of
the special issue. Final drafts are due September 2023 (TBC).

Please note that Continuum does not accept papers longer than 6,000
words, inclusive of tables, references, figure captures, and
endnotes. Please also note final acceptance is conditional upon
Continuum’s agreement.

The special issue editors intend to organize a workshop with all
participants in early 2023.


Editors:

Jesse van Amelsvoort
University of Amsterdam, NL
Email: j.d.vanamelsvo...@uva.nl

Margriet van der Waal
University of Groningen/University of Amsterdam, NL
Email: m.c.van.der.w...@rug.nl






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