5th Annual Conference Comparative Media Studies in Today’s World
April 07, 2017
Comparative Media Studies in Today’s World: Media Transformations in Times of Technological Boom and Political Polarization
In 2017, the conference is dedicated to analysing political and technilogical transformations of media systems in comparative perspective. Keynote speakers include Katrin Voltmer (UK), Silvio Waisbord (USA), Vaclav Stetka (UK) and Elena Vartanova (Russia). The conference includes a plenary podium discussion, two round tables, three keynote speeches, and six panels for academic presentations.
The conference is supported by U.S. Consulate General in Saint Petersburg, Friedrich Ebert Foundation in Russia, and Center for German and European Studies (St.Petersburg State Univertsity). Several events are included into the program of the German Week in St.Petersburg of 2017.
April 11, 2017
Room 603
3 – 5 pm – Registration
5 – 7 pm – Within the German Week in St.Petersburg: Workshop round table
Political Polarization and Professional Journalistic Practices in Germany and Russia
Participants:
Katrin Voltmer, University of Leeds, UK
Meike Duelffer, Die Zeit Online, Germany
Dennis Lichtenstein, Zeppelin University, Germany
Jens Hildebrandt, Friedrich Ebert Stiftung, Germany – Russia
Svetlana Bodrunova, St.Petersburg State University, Russia
Valery Nechay, Echo of St.Petersburg, Russia
Mikhail Tyurkin, St.Petersburg State University, Russia
Moderator: Anna Litvinenko, Free University of Berlin, Germany – St.Petersburg State University, Russia
April 12, 2017
Rooms 603 and 302
9 – 9.30 am – Registration
9.30 – 9.45 – Welcome speeches
9.45 – 11.00 am – Plenary podium discussion
Media Transformations Across Cultures: Empowerment of People?
Participants:
Silvio Waisbord, George Washington University, USA
Huang Yu, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong, China
Katrin Voltmer, University of Leeds, UK
Kaarle Nordenstreng, University of Tampere, Finland
Moderator: Svetlana Bodrunova, St.Petersburg State University, Russia
11 – 11.30 am – Coffee break (Room 604)
11.30 am – 1 pm
Keynote speeches
Silvio Waisbord, George Washington University, USA
Are all populisms comparable? Insights from comparative media and communication studies
Elena Vartanova, Lomonosov Moscow State University, Russia
Media transformations and path dependency: Limitations of transitional approaches
1 – 2 pm – Lunch break
2 – 3 pm – Parallel panels
Panel 1. Theoretical approaches to comparative media analysis – Room 603
Tobias Eberwein, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Austria
Transformations of media self-regulation – a comparative view
Gal Ariely, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel
Measurement equivalence in cross-national communication studies
Jan Miessler, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong, China
Comparative media research in the age of global complexity
Panel chair: Kaarle Nordenstreng, Finland
Panel 2. Political polarization and political coverage – Room 302
Dennis Lichtenstein, Zeppelin University, Germany
Framing the Ukraine Crisis: A Comparison between Talk Show Debates in Russian and German TV
Olessia Koltsova, Sergey Pashakhin, National Research University – Higher School of Economics, Russia
The Representation of Ukrainian Crisis in News: Frame Analysis with Topic Modelling
Alexander Lutsenko, LIER-IMM-EHESS, France
Interviewing Styles on State-Controlled and Non-State-Controlled Channels in Russia: Disparity or Interdependence?
Panel Chair: Anna Litvinenko, Germany – Russia
3 – 4 pm – Parallel panels
Panel 3. Today’s comparative research on social media content – Room 603
Anna Litvinenko, Free University of Berlin, Germany
Mapping Comment Sections of News Websites across Post-Soviet World
Svetlana Bodrunova, St.Petersburg State University, Russia
Secondary gatekeeping in action: affiliation-based patterns of content sharing during inter-ethnic conflicts in Germany, the USA, and Russia
Elena Arbatskaya, Tyumen State University, Russia
Media coverage of feminist hashtag campaigns #Neboyusskazat (#Iamnotafraidtosay) and #Notokey cases
Panel chair: Ilya Bykov, Russia
Panel 4. National cases in research on social media – Room 302
Abeyami Ortega-Dominguez, Loughborough University, UK
#WeWantOurselvesAlive: The 2016 Women’s March and the transformations of visual citizenship in neoliberal Mexico. A comparative recount across media
Anna Smoliarova, St.Petersburg State University, Russia
Márton Bene, Gabriella Szabó, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungary
Bonded by interactions: polarizing factors and integrative capacities of the media. The case of Hungary
Panel chair: Yulia Taranova, Russia
4 – 4.45 pm
Keynote speech
Vaclav Stetka, Loughborough University, UK
Social media, alt-news and the future of democracy in Central and Eastern Europe
4.45 – 5 pm – Coffee break (Room 604)
5 – 6.30 pm – Round table
25 years after communism: Central and Eastern European media and journalism in multi-directional transitions
Participants:
Monika Wichłacz, University of Wroclaw, Poland
Marzena Cichosz, University of Wroclaw, Poland
Vaclav Stetka, Loughborough University, UK
Elena Vartanova, Lomonosov Mosocw State University, Russia
Elena Georgieva, St.Petersburg State University, Russia
Moderator: Svetlana Bodrunova, St.Petersburg State University, Russia
April 13, 2017
Room 603
10 – 12 am – Plenary session, 56th 'Media in the Modern World' Annual Forum
The Neva Award ceremony
Plenary keynotes, including:
Katrin Voltmer, University of Leeds, UK
Changing media, changing politics: Mediatization and the transformation of political power
12 – 12.30 am – Coffee break
12.30 am – 1.30 pm – Panel 5. Professional roles and identities of Russian journalists
Kamilla Nigmatullina, St.Petersburg State University, Russia
Professional roles and tech innovations in today’s Russian journalism
Sergey Davydov, Olga Logunova, National Research University – Higher School of Economics
Journalists’ professional roles in Russia
Natalia Avdonina, Northern Arctic Federal University
Journalism Education in the Time of Transition: How to Build Journalists’ Professional Identity?
Panel chair: Marina Berezhnaya, Russia
1.30 – 2.30 pm – Panel 6. Media within power environments
Ilya Yablokov, University of Leeds, UK
Power Lost and Freedom Relinquished: Russian Journalists Assessing the First Post-Soviet Decade
Ilya Bykov, Ludmila V. Balahonskaya, St.Petersburg State University, Russia
Types and Levels of Verbal Aggression in Political Blogs: A Case of the Echo of Moscow
Tamara Gromova, St.Petersburg State University, Russia
The role of media in innovations advancement in Russian and Northern European countries media environment
Panel chair: Anna Smoliarova, Russia
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