25.2268, Calls: Text/Corpus Linguistics/ Signs and Society (Jrnl)

The LINGUIST List linguist at linguistlist.org
Fri May 23 14:19:59 UTC 2014


LINGUIST List: Vol-25-2268. Fri May 23 2014. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.

Subject: 25.2268, Calls: Text/Corpus Linguistics/ Signs and Society (Jrnl)

Moderators: Damir Cavar, Eastern Michigan U <damir at linguistlist.org>

Reviews: Monica Macaulay, U of Wisconsin Madison
Rajiv Rao, U of Wisconsin Madison
Joseph Salmons, U of Wisconsin Madison
Mateja Schuck, U of Wisconsin Madison
Anja Wanner, U of Wisconsin Madison
       <reviews at linguistlist.org>

Homepage: http://linguistlist.org

Do you want to donate to LINGUIST without spending an extra penny? Bookmark
the Amazon link for your country below; then use it whenever you buy from
Amazon!

USA: http://www.amazon.com/?_encoding=UTF8&tag=linguistlist-20
Britain: http://www.amazon.co.uk/?_encoding=UTF8&tag=linguistlist-21
Germany: http://www.amazon.de/?_encoding=UTF8&tag=linguistlistd-21
Japan: http://www.amazon.co.jp/?_encoding=UTF8&tag=linguistlist-22
Canada: http://www.amazon.ca/?_encoding=UTF8&tag=linguistlistc-20
France: http://www.amazon.fr/?_encoding=UTF8&tag=linguistlistf-21

For more information on the LINGUIST Amazon store please visit our
FAQ at http://linguistlist.org/amazon-faq.cfm.

Editor for this issue: Andrew Lamont <alamont at linguistlist.org>
================================================================  


Date: Fri, 23 May 2014 10:19:39
From: Alfonso Del Percio [alfonso.delpercio at unisg.ch]
Subject: Text/Corpus Linguistics/ Signs and Society (Jrnl)

E-mail this message to a friend:
http://linguistlist.org/issues/emailmessage/verification.cfm?iss=25-2268.html&submissionid=33239520&topicid=3&msgnumber=1
 
Full Title: Signs and Society 


Linguistic Field(s): Text/Corpus Linguistics 

Call Deadline: 01-Jun-2014 

The Semiotics of Nation Branding: Toward an Analysis of Post-Nationalism?
Supplementary Issue of Signs and Society (University of Chicago Press),Winter 2016
Call date: March 1, 2014
Guest editor: Alfonso Del Percio 

In modernism, nationalism provided the condition of possibility for the hegemonization of industrial capitalism. Late capitalism, however, has dramatically affected the way governments (and other economic actors) invest in the production of discourses on the nation and its identity. In this political-economic environment, capital, products, individuals, and semiotic resources circulate across national economies. No longer restricted to specific national locations, production and consumption change according to the needs, interests and desires of the markets and its actors; and a new form of a transnational market has emerged, bringing states and their territories into competition. In this post-national framework, the competitiveness of nation-states is dependent on their distinctiveness in the international markets, and so governments invest in the "branding" of their difference. Socio-cultural ideologies of the nation facilitate a discursive construction of a nation-state as unique, special, and desirable.

This promotional investment in nationalism needs to be understood in the framework of a governmental practice generally called "nation branding." This is a marketing strategy aiming to discursively transform a nation into a commodity that can be branded, thereby successfully positioning it within the international markets. As such, nation branding is a metasemiotic practice that creates value in forging—through the staging of semiotic resources that index an ideology of "national identity"—affective meaning (feelings of exoticism, internationalism, innovation, integrity, reliability, stability, etc.), which a branding discourse then projects onto the promoted nation.

This supplementary issue will analyze ways in which semiotic resources (such as texts, images, symbols, cultural artifacts, flags, songs, buildings, events, etc.) enable the staging of a nation in the context of such branding practices. We especially invite papers discussing which semiotic resources used to index a nation are considered to be appropriate, and for which markets. Further, papers will investigate how the image of a nation is invented, controlled, and enacted in these processes and will examine who (individuals, communities and/or institutions) is legitimatized to brand a nation in a certain way and for whom. This supplementary issue will discuss the methodological implications and challenges posed when analyzing branding practices, especially in terms of how we, as analysts, can grasp the production, circulation, and consumption of nation branding practices across time and space. How can we analyze the "decontextualization," "entextualization," and "recontextualization" of modernist discourses on the nation in a post-national political-economic context? Finally, with that in mind, this issue will explore how and under which conditions such post- national branding discourses have (or do not have) consequences on the (re)imagination of nationhood and on the relations of difference and inequality implied.

If you wish to contribute to this supplementary issue of Signs and Society, please submit an abstract of 500 words, with a full title and list of key references, to Alfonso Del Percio at alfonso.delpercio at gmail.com no later than June 1, 2014.






----------------------------------------------------------
LINGUIST List: Vol-25-2268	
----------------------------------------------------------



More information about the LINGUIST mailing list