scholarly journals Innovative Methods in Media and Communication Research

2020 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Helena Sousa

Media and communication research has been dominated by the Anglo-American paradigm and English has become the lingua franca of academic life. The 2018 ECREA conference focused on centres and peripheries, inclusions and exclusions, cores and margins in the field. In line with the programme, this special session on Language in Academia tried to respond to contemporary critical asymmetries, analysing a specific dimension often taken for granted: the English language hegemony. The centrality of the English language is often assumed without questioning or critical reasoning.


2006 ◽  
Vol 27 (1) ◽  
pp. 31-44 ◽  
Author(s):  
Göran Eriksson

Abstract During the last few decades, the possibilities and limitations of qualitative media audience research have regularly been discussed in media and communication research. Quantitatively oriented researchers have claimed that qualitatively oriented research is incapable of producing general knowledge. From a ‘radical ethnographic’ point of view it has been stated that such knowledge is more or less useless, while other qualitatively oriented researchers have approached the question of generality in a more balanced way, and argued for the necessity to interpret specific events within a framework of more general theories. But these solutions are not satisfactory. The aim of this article is to suggest an alternative conceptualisation of generality. From the meta-theoretical viewpoint of critical realism, this article states that generalisations have to take into consideration the domain of the deep structures of reality. Qualitative media audience research should aim at producing general knowledge about the constituent properties or transfactual conditions of the process of media consumption.


2020 ◽  
Vol 35 (s1) ◽  
pp. 18-28
Author(s):  
Kaarle Nordenstreng ◽  
Kirsten Frandsen ◽  
Rune Ottosen

2017 ◽  
Vol 45 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Loes Janssen ◽  
Marieke Fransen

In 2017 was de eer aan Tilburg University om het Etmaal van de Communicatiewetenschap te organiseren. Op 26 en 27 januari vond deze zeer geslaagde editie van het Etmaal plaats met het thema ‘Innovative Methods in Communication Research’. De enthousiaste organisatie was in handen van communicatiewetenschappers van het Tilburg Center for Cognition and Communication (TiCC), werkzaam binnen de afdeling Communicatie- en Informatiewetenschappen (CIW). Binnen TiCC bestuderen internationale wetenschappers vanuit diverse disciplines, waaronder Artificial Intelligence (AI), Cognitiewetenschap, Communicatiewetenschap, Computertechnologie, Taalwetenschap, Neurowetenschappen en Psychologie, de diverse kanten van de menselijke communicatie, zowel verbaal, non-verbaal, als via digitale media.


2019 ◽  
Vol 22 (5) ◽  
pp. 706-715
Author(s):  
Jason Vincent A. Cabañes

This piece teases out the links between this special issue’s key themes regarding performance and citizenship and the distinct realities of transitional democracies. To contribute to generating insights into other countries currently in the grip of populist political regimes, it looks at the case of the Philippines. In this context, it matters to think about the diversity of productions that can enable performances of citizenship. This is because contemporary media and communication research in the country has understandably but narrowly prioritised the toxicity of online political discourse brought about by the rise of populist political performances and political trolling. It also matters in the Philippines to think about the role of those involved in productions about performances of citizenship. This is because of the problems posed by how ‘authenticity’ has been hijacked by populism and has been weaponised against those who seek to critique the current political dispensation.


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