| |||||||||||
DNC2 2017 : DiscourseNet Congress #2 - Interdisciplinary Discourse Studies: Theory and Practice | |||||||||||
Link: http://dnc2.discourseanalysis.net | |||||||||||
| |||||||||||
Call For Papers | |||||||||||
While ‘discourse’ has long been an object of investigation in many disciplines, the contours of a new field of transdisciplinary research are now coming to the fore: Discourse Studies. Known for theoretical orientations and methodological tools at the intersection of language and society, discourse research usually deals with social phenomena with a particular focus on the entanglements of power and language. While Discourse Studies has resulted from the exchange between numerous strands and approaches which deal with the social production of meaning, an increasing need for interdisciplinary exchange can now be observed. The Second International DiscourseNet Congress at Warwick aims to represent the many strands, schools, and perspectives in Discourse Studies, from the humanities to the social sciences, from strictly interpretive to quantifying methodologies, from discourse as a situated practice to discourse as socially distributed knowledge.
Reflecting the diversity of disciplines in Discourse Studies, the following guests have confirmed their participation: Ann Phoenix (University College London, Institute of Education, UK) and Michal Krzyzanowski (Örebro University, Sweden). We invite contributions which deal with theoretical and/or methodological challenges in Discourse Studies, preferably with a focus on the nexus of language and power. We especially welcome papers which re-examine existing discourse theoretical frameworks, study social phenomena empirically and reflect on the critical potentials of Discourse Studies. Papers are invited to focus on studying discourses including but not limited to: - media discourse - political discourse - academic discourse - educational discourse - institutional discourse and talk - economic discourse - medical discourse - discourses of law and justice And which deal with topics such as: - knowledge and power - subjectivity in contemporary society - discursive epistemology - indexicality - ideology - materiality of/and discourse - critique and reflexivity - bi-, multi- and translingual communication - discourse and gender, class, migration - discourse and discrimination - formal and informal discourse - argumentation and rhetorics - social cognition - institutional discourse - workplace communication - practices and identities in the workplace - multimodal interaction and discourse analysis - online media formats - materialism and discourse - digital culture and digital humanities - crosscultural interaction, multilingualism and language policy - multimodality - corpus - conversation and interaction Abstracts of no more than 200 words should be submitted through the application form by 1 March 2017 on http://dnc2.discourseanalysis.net. The presentations (15 minutes) are normally in English but other languages are welcome. Please contact us by mail if you would like to present in a language other than English. If you want to suggest a panel for the congress, please get in touch with us as early as possible (dnc2@warwick.ac.uk). Notifications of acceptance are expected to be communicated by 1 May 2017. If accepted, applicants will have to register to confirm their participation. An early-bird fee of 60£ will apply until 1 June 2017 for fully funded researchers and a reduced fee of 30£ for enrolled students without access to institutional funding (after 1 June 2017: 80£/40£). There is a limited number of places. Registration will be closed when full. Created in 2007 and funded by DFG, ERC and other institutions, DiscourseNet is an interdisciplinary network of discourse researchers in the social sciences and humanities. Since its inception, DiscourseNet has organized more than 20 meetings, workshops and conferences in Europe (http://discoursenet.discourseanalysis.net). During the 2nd DiscourseNet Congress, participants will be invited to discuss the possibilities of an international association which could be set up by 2019 and would be independent of DiscourseNet. Open to discourse researchers from all disciplines, schools and strands, such an association would aim to represent Discourse Studies as an interdisciplinary field. Organizer Johannes Angermuller, Jo Angouri, Johannes Beetz, Françoise Dufour, Sixian Hah, Tilly Harrison, Eduardo Chávez Herrera, Michael Kranert, Ronny Scholz, Veit Schwab, Sue Wharton, Marta Natalia Wróblewska Address: Centre for Applied Linguistics University of Warwick Coventry CV4 7AL United Kingdom |
|