Online Conf/CfP - The History of Medialization and Empowerment: The Intersection of Women’s Rights Activism and the Media, 20–22 January 2022, International Standing Working Group on Medialization and Empowerment

Publish Date: Apr 12, 2021

Deadline: May 14, 2021

Event Dates: from Jan 20, 2022 12:00 to Jan 22, 2022 12:00

The History of Medialization and Empowerment: The Intersection of Women’s Rights Activism and the Media

Final Meeting of the International Standing Working Group on Medialization and Empowerment

CONFERENCE

20–22 January 2022

Convenors: Christina von Hodenberg and Jane Freeland (German Historical Institute London) ǀ Partners: Max Weber Stiftung India Branch Office, German Historical Institute Washington DC, German Historical Institute Rome, Orient Institute Beirut
Venue: German Historical Institute London / Online

This conference is the culmination of a three-year project examining the networks, interconnections and dependencies of women’s rights and the media throughout the long-twentieth century. Focusing on the history of feminism(s) as a lens into changing practices and ideas of women’s emancipation, this conference calls on participants to reconsider the role of the media in shaping, constituting and directing discussions and attitudes towards gender roles and women’s rights internationally. How has the printed press, television and radio advanced or hindered women’s emancipation historically and in a global context? How have feminists used the media to create counter-spaces for advocating, discussing and debating women’s issues? And what are the limits or ambivalences of discussions of women’s rights in the media?

In asking these questions, we draw on the concept of medialization, a term that refers both to the way spaces of communication have become increasingly dense and interlinked over time, and also to the increasing pressure for other social sectors to conform to the conditions imposed by the media. Using this framework, the conference asks what medialization has meant for women’s emancipation in the past: in what ways did the media set the agenda for debates of women’s rights? And what space was there for activists to influence or shape these discussions?

We invite applications from interested scholars working in history and on historically-focused projects in sociology, anthropology, media and cultural studies, and gender studies to attend a two-day conference exploring the connections between the media and the history of feminism in a global context. We particularly welcome applications from PhD candidates and Early Career Academics.

The conference will be held from 20-22 January, 2022, in either an online or hybrid in-person/online format at the German Historical Institute in London. If attending in-person, economy travel will be reimbursed and accommodation provided for successful applicants. The conference language is English and participation will be structured around discussion of common readings, presentations and keynote lectures. Successful participants will be invited to submit pre-circulated think pieces of approximately 1500-words and give a short presentation based upon their own research, the shared readings, and the themes of the working group.

For more information click "LINK TO ORIGINAL" below.

Further Official Information

Link to Original

Similar Opportunities


Disciplines

Gender Studies

History

Humanities

Social Sciences

Eligible Countries

International

Conference Types

Call for Papers