[Linganth] CfP: “Political Narratives / Narratives of the Political” (Special Issue of Narrative Culture)

Stefan Groth stefan.groth at uzh.ch
Mon Apr 3 13:42:59 UTC 2017


Call for Papers: “Political Narratives / Narratives of the Political”
Special Issue of Narrative Culture, Guest Editor: Stefan Groth (stefan.groth at uzh.ch), Institute of Social Anthropology and Cultural Studies –
Popular Culture Studies, University of Zurich

Deadline for Abstracts: June 11, 2017

A PDF version of the call is available at http://www.stefangroth.com/assets/pdf/CfP_Political_Narratives.pdf <http://www.stefangroth.com/assets/pdf/CfP_Political_Narratives.pdf>

The notion of political narrative has, over the last couple of decades, gained increased attention both in public debates and academia (cf. Shenhav 2005). Political pundits draw from the concepts of “homo narrans” (Lehmann 2009; Niles 2010) and of narrative structure as universal (Gottschall 2013) to point to the centrality of “stories” in politics. Narratives, it is argued, are both crucial and effective in mediating political stance, in selling policy programs or in positioning forceful “metanarratives” (Lyotard 1984) of liberalism, conservatism or socialism. Less the content or logics of political arguments, but catching stories and being “on message” (Silverstein 2011) are understood to enable political success. While studies have analyzed the use of political narratives in politics as well as their conceptualization in theory, only little has been done on them in everyday contexts: how are political narratives, produced in policy processes, taken up, interpreted, modified and reproduced in everyday stories and as part of popular narratives? And how are political processes and structures framed in everyday narratives in the public sphere? The proposed special issue seeks to contribute to these questions by asking for submissions on (a) the reception of political narratives in everyday contexts and (b) conceptualizations of political spheres in everyday narratives of the political.

So far, in scholarly debates political narratives are used as an analytic category (Gadinger, Jarzebski, and Yildiz 2014), discussed with regard to their relevance to political theory (Hofmann, Renner, and Teich 2014) or proposed as normative recommendations to construct, e. g., a “European narrative” to foster a European identity (Beck and Grande 2007). More recently, studies have looked at how narratives are used by political actors (Bacon 2012; Shenhav 2006), in relation to linguistic-anthropological aspects (Lempert and Silverstein 2012; Silverstein 2011) or how narrations in media – movies, TV series, books – take politics as their theme (Gadinger et al. 2016). In folklore studies, the political entanglements of folklore (and with it, of narratives) have been highlighted vis-à-vis their role in nation building processes (Dundes 1985; Wilson 1973; Wilson 1976; Oinas 1978), their legitimizing function for political processes (Wilson 1975) or their meaning for the formation of the discipline (Ó Giolláin 2014). Specifically, the role of jokes and tales (Laineste 2008; Shehata 1992; Oring 2004) and the relations between folklore and political representation (e. g. Moody-Turner 2013) have been highlighted.

While the relations between narratives and political processes have thus been scrutinized regarding the use of narrative both in contemporary politics and from a historic perspective, only little has been contributed to the study of the role of politics in everyday narratives (recent exceptions being Bernal 2017; Hercbergs 2016; Noy 2015), and especially in relation to the concept of political narrative. Against the backdrop of such questions and considerations, the special issue of “Narrative Culture” asks for contributions considering any of the following topics:
Reception, interpretation, modification and reproduction of political narratives not by professional political actors and in policy arenas, but in everyday contexts
References to and making sense of politics, including the production and circulation of political narratives, in popular narratives
Conceptualizations of the political sphere in narratives
Relations between traditional narratives and contemporary political narratives in everyday contexts
Schedule
Authors are invited to submit an abstract of no more than 500 words to stefan.groth at uzh.ch <mailto:stefan.groth at uzh.ch> before June 11th, 2017. The deadline for authors of accepted abstracts to submit their full paper (5,000–7,500 words) for consideration is November 30th, 2017. Publication after peer-review is scheduled for 2018. Only original articles that are not simultaneously under consideration by another journal will be considered. Submissions should not have been previously published in any language.

About Narrative Culture
Narrative Culture is a journal that conceptualizes narration as a broad and pervasive human practice, warranting a holistic perspective that grasps the place of narrative comparatively across time and space. The journal invites contributions that document, discuss and theorize narrative culture, and offers a platform that integrates approaches spread across various disciplines. The field of narrative culture thus outlined is defined by a large variety of forms of popular narratives, including not only oral and written texts, but also narratives in images, three-dimensional art, customs, rituals, drama, dance, music, and so forth. Narrative Culture is peer-reviewed and international as well as interdisciplinary in orientation.

References
Bacon, Edwin. 2012. “Public Political Narratives: Developing a Neglected Source Through the Exploratory Case of Russia in the Putin-Medvedev Era.” Political Studies 60 (4): 768–786.
Beck, Ulrich, and Edgar Grande. 2007. Cosmopolitan Europe. Cambridge: Polity Press.
Bernal, Victoria. 2017. “Diaspora and the Afterlife of Violence: Eritrean National Narratives and What Goes Without Saying.” American Anthropologist 119 (1): 23–34.
Dundes, Alan. 1985. “Nationalistic Inferiority Complexes and the Fabrication of Fakelore: a Reconsideration of Ossian, the Kinder- Und Hausmärchen, the Kalevala, and Paul Bunyan.” Journal of Folklore Research 22 (1): 5–18.
Gadinger, Frank, Martina Kopf, Aysem Mert, and Christopher Smith, eds. 2016. Political Storytelling: From Fact to Fiction. Duisburg: Centre for Global Cooperation Research.
Gadinger, Frank, Sebastian Jarzebski, and Taylan Yildiz, eds. 2014. Politische Narrative. Wiesbaden: Springer-Verlag.
Gottschall, Jonathan. 2013. The Storytelling Animal: How Stories Make Us Human. New York: Mariner Books.
Hercbergs, Dana. 2016. “Remembering ‘Old Jerusalem’: Storytelling and the Politics of Sephardi/Mizrahi Cultural Revival.” The Journal of American Folklore 129 (512): 146–170.
Hofmann, Wilhelm, Judith Renner, and Katja Teich, eds. 2014. Narrative Formen der Politik. Wiesbaden: Springer.
Laineste, Liisi. 2008. “Politics of Joking: Ethnic Jokes and Their Targets in Estonia (1890s–2007).” Folklore 40: 117–146.
Lehmann, Albrecht. 2009. “Homo Narrans: Indivuduelle Und Kollektive Dimensionen Des Erzählens.” In Erzählkultur: Beiträge Zur Kulturwissenschaftlichen Erzählforschung, edited by Rolf Wilhelm Brednich. Berlin: Walter De Gruyter.
Lempert, Michael, and Michael Silverstein. 2012. Creatures of Politics. Indiana University Press.
Lyotard, Jean-François. 1984. The Postmodern Condition. Michigan: University of Minnesota Press.
Moody-Turner, Shirley. 2013. Black Folklore and the Politics of Racial Representation. University Press of Mississippi.
Niles, John D. 2010. Homo Narrans. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
Noy, Chaim. 2015. Thank You for Dying for Our Country. Oxford University Press.
Oinas, Felix J, ed. 1978. Folklore, Nationalism, and Politics. Columbus, Ohio: Slavica Publishers.
Oring, Elliott. 2004. “Risky Business: Political Jokes Under Repressive Regimes.” Western Folklore 63 (3): 209–236.
Ó Giolláin, Diarmuid. 2014. “Narratives of Nation or of Progress? Genealogies of European Folklore Studies.” Narrative Culture 1 (1): 71–84.
Shehata, Samer S. 1992. “The Politics of Laughter: Nasser, Sadat, and Mubarek in Egyptian Political Jokes.” Folklore 103 (1): 75–91.
Shenhav, Shaul R. 2005. “Thin and Thick Narrative Analysis: on the Question of Defining and Analyzing Political Narratives.” Narrative Inquiry 15 (1): 75–99.
Shenhav, Shaul R. 2006. “Political Narratives and Political Reality.” International Political Science Review / Revue Internationale De Science Politique 27 (3): 245–262.
Silverstein, Michael. 2011. “The ‘Message’ in the (Political) Battle.” Language & Communication 31 (3): 203–216.
Wilson, William A. 1973. “Herder, Folklore and Romantic Nationalism.” The Journal of Popular Culture 6 (4): 819–835.
Wilson, William A. 1975. “The ‘Kalevala’ and Finnish Politics.” Journal of the Folklore Institute 12 (2/3): 131–155.
Wilson, William A. 1976. Folklore and Nationalism in Modern Finland. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
 

*****
University of Zurich
Dr. Stefan Groth
Senior Researcher / Head Laboratory Popular Culture Studies
Institute of Social Anthropology and Cultural Studies
Popular Culture Studies
Affolternstrasse 56
CH-8050 Zurich

+41 44 634 92 96 Phone

www.isek.uzh.ch
stefan.groth at uzh.ch

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