Dear GEP-ed,

If you plan to participate in the Association of American Geographers
meeting in NYC in Feb 2012, please consider this session (described
below) for your paper/presentation. Email Dan Brockington
[email protected] with any questions, comments and
submissions. The deadline is Sept 20.

Thanks, max


-- 
Assistant Professor, CIRES Center for Science & Technology Policy
University of Colorado-Boulder
http://sciencepolicy.colorado.edu/boykoff/

Senior Visiting Research Associate, Environmental Change Institute
University of Oxford
http://www.eci.ox.ac.uk/people/boykoffmax.php

due out next month: 'Who Speaks for the Climate?' Cambridge Univ Press
www.cambridge.org/9780521133050



CFP: AAG, NY Feb 23-28, 2012

Celebrity, Media and Vital Causes

Session organizers: Dan Brockington (Manchester), Max Boykoff
(University of Colorado) and Mike Goodman (King’s College London)

The power of celebrity to mediate vital causes has risen inexorably
over the last three decades, and academic attention to the phenomenon
is now gathering speed. The amplification of these voices through
governing elites and social movements, and the reshaping of both to
accommodate their ‘celebritization’ is exciting an increasingly loud,
and at times heated, debate in academia and newspapers. The presence
of celebrity voices, bodies and discourses has emerged in disputes
over environments and ecologies, international poverty and
development, and a plethora of other social issues. In so doing, their
influence raises important questions about the social values
celebritized campaigns promote, the accountability of elites and
decision makers to electorates and the role of the media in western
democracies.

This panel brings together some of the latest research in diverse
fields to elucidate those issues and ask a series of—amongst
other—questions such as: how has the emergence as well as ‘use-’ and
‘exchange-value’  of celebrity changed the spatialities of activism
over time? How do celebrities work to frame what we are calling ‘vital
causes’ either to their benefit or their detriment? How and in what
ways have celebrities become the pivot around which the media develop
narratives designed to bring attention to causes? In short, have
segments of the media turned news and reporting into more fully
polarized and binary debates? What forms of evidence are there to show
how celebrity-tinged campaigns ‘work’ and how do we define and
articulate what this ‘working’ might mean in our thoroughly mediated
culture? How do these play out differently across varied ideological,
socioeconomic and political cultures?

For those interested in this session, send an abstract to Dan
([email protected]) by 20 September so we can put the
sessions together for the meeting.

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