Bremen. The next session at the ‘Doing Global Media Studies’ ECREA 2010 pre-conference starts with Stefan Hauser and Martin Luginbühl, whose focus is on textual analysis. Their background is in linguistics, and they are interested in moving beyond the idea that culture, language, nation, and territory form one unproblematic entity – more promising is a more flexible definition by which cultures articulate themselves along a variety of dimensions.
They take a praxeological understanding of culture, therefore: respecting the performative as well as semiotic dimension; taking culture as a category of both content and form; and seeing language as a reflection …
Bremen. If it’s Monday, this must be (a very chilly) Bremen – I’ve made it to the ‘Doing Global Media Studies’ conference that is itself a pre-conference to the European Communication Conference (ECREA) in Hamburg. We start today with a keynote by Sonia Livingstone, who begins by noting the importance of cross-national research, but also the difficulties in scaling up research in this way. What are the key problems here, then – intellectual, political, and practical, not least also for multicultural and multinational research teams?
There is also a strong push towards the international sharing of research outcomes, of course …