[CITASA] Media Sociology Pre(ASA) Conference Report by Casey Brianza

BW
Barry Wellman
Mon, Aug 25, 2014 5:17 PM

Appreciate receiving the link from Casey via Twitter

Herein is text only. Link has some nifty pix

http://asamediasociology.blogspot.ca/2014/08/media-sociology-preconference-report.html

Barry Wellman


FRSC               NetLab Network              INSNA Founder
Faculty of Information (iSchool)
University of Toronto                          Toronto Canada M5S 3G6
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~wellman          twitter: @barrywellman
NETWORKED:The New Social Operating System. Lee Rainie & Barry Wellman
MIT Press            http://amzn.to/zXZg39      Print $15  Kindle $9
Old/NewCyberTimes http://bit.ly/c8N9V8


MEDIA SOCIOLOGY

Preconference Date: Friday, August 15, 2014
Venue: Mills College (Oakland, CA), Lokey Graduate School of Business
Sunday, August 24, 2014
Media Sociology Preconference Report (Mills College, August 15, 2014)

Margaret Hunter welcomes Media Sociology Preconference attendees to Mills
College

As Rodney Benson wrote last year in his review of the inaugural Media
Sociology Preconference held at NYU’s Institute for Public Knowledge,
“Elihu Katz and Jeff Pooley (2008) maintain that sociology abandoned mass
communications research. This may have been true at one point, but in
recent years increasing numbers of sociologists are claiming back this
territory as they realize how obviously central media are to their
research questions. […] The drive for institutionalization [of media
sociology] is moving forward at a rapid pace and scale, exceeding initial
expectations.”

In my capacity as co-organizer of the Media Sociology Preconferences, I am
therefore delighted to report that the energy and appetite for media
sociology in the American Sociological Association has not waned, and our
second preconference on August 15, hosted at the Mills College Lorry I.
Lokey Graduate School of Business in Oakland, California, was a resounding
success. We received 68 paper submissions by the deadline, with scholars
hailing not just from the United States and Canada but also China, France,
Germany, Japan, Italy, Malaysia, the Netherlands, and Russia. In total,
there were 77 pre-registered attendees.

Clayton Childress delivers his morning keynote address on "Being Passable:
The Double Match of Race and Meaning in American Book Publishing"

The day kicked off bright and early with a catered breakfast and a welcome
from Mills College sociologist Margaret Hunter. This was immediately
followed by a fantastic lecture by Clayton Childress of the University of
Toronto – Scarborough. In keeping with a tradition begun in 2013, the
preconference’s morning keynote slot was reserved for a junior scholar
whose work we believe will become central to the field of media sociology
in the future. Clayton did not disappoint; his talk on the troubling
whiteness of both production and content in American trade book publishing
was clearly well-received and provocative.

A jam-packed program of panel sessions followed, featuring a diverse range
of substantive areas, theories, and methodologies. It was especially
fascinating to see the ways in which media sociology intersects with
established subfields such as the sociologies of work, race, gender,
nationalism, and even the teaching and learning of sociology. Yet there
was also plenty of downtime throughout the day to socialize and network
over lunch and afternoon coffee, and to explore the idyllic Mills College
campus.

"Media Sociology as a Vocation" Plenary Panel, featuring (from left to
right): Casey Brienza (moderator), Laura Grindstaff, Paul Hirsch, Paul
Lopes, Guobin Yang, and Ron Jacobs

The preconference concluded with an evening plenary discussion panel on
“Media Sociology as a Vocation.” Moderated by myself and featuring Laura
Grindstaff, Paul Hirsch, Ron Jacobs, Paul Lopes, and Guobin Yang, this
panel focused on various pragmatic, professional, and vocational
considerations for--and challenges facing--media sociologists. Panelists
discussed lessons from their own career biographies and the importance of
interdisciplinarity both within and beyond sociology. They further praised
the remarkable breadth of scholarship the preconference had attracted and
the novel intellectual linkages the gathering encouraged. Nevertheless,
the panelists affirmed, formal legitimation for media sociology within the
ASA is absolutely critical. Of particular significance is their
recommendation, given the growing role of the media in all arenas of
contemporary social life and the enduring popularity of the subject with
students, that we do more to lobby Department Chairs/Heads, Deans, and
Provosts for faculty lines in media sociology.

All in all, it was a productive and exhilarating day, and I was both
inspired and humbled by the energy and talent of the media sociologists of
the American Sociological Association. Matthias Revers and I continue to
advocate for formal recognition for media sociology in the ASA, so if you
are current ASA member (regular, student, or emeritus) and would like to
see that happen, please do sign the petition. Signing the petition, if you
have not already done so, will also keep you updated on the latest news
from the section formation campaign.

We look forward to seeing you in Chicago in 2015!

– Casey Brienza

Special thanks to Dan Ryan and to the Mills College Department of
Sociology & Anthropology for their generous sponsorship.

Appreciate receiving the link from Casey via Twitter Herein is text only. Link has some nifty pix http://asamediasociology.blogspot.ca/2014/08/media-sociology-preconference-report.html Barry Wellman _______________________________________________________________________ FRSC NetLab Network INSNA Founder Faculty of Information (iSchool) University of Toronto Toronto Canada M5S 3G6 http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~wellman twitter: @barrywellman NETWORKED:The New Social Operating System. Lee Rainie & Barry Wellman MIT Press http://amzn.to/zXZg39 Print $15 Kindle $9 Old/NewCyberTimes http://bit.ly/c8N9V8 ________________________________________________________________________ MEDIA SOCIOLOGY Preconference Date: Friday, August 15, 2014 Venue: Mills College (Oakland, CA), Lokey Graduate School of Business Sunday, August 24, 2014 Media Sociology Preconference Report (Mills College, August 15, 2014) Margaret Hunter welcomes Media Sociology Preconference attendees to Mills College As Rodney Benson wrote last year in his review of the inaugural Media Sociology Preconference held at NYU’s Institute for Public Knowledge, “Elihu Katz and Jeff Pooley (2008) maintain that sociology abandoned mass communications research. This may have been true at one point, but in recent years increasing numbers of sociologists are claiming back this territory as they realize how obviously central media are to their research questions. […] The drive for institutionalization [of media sociology] is moving forward at a rapid pace and scale, exceeding initial expectations.” In my capacity as co-organizer of the Media Sociology Preconferences, I am therefore delighted to report that the energy and appetite for media sociology in the American Sociological Association has not waned, and our second preconference on August 15, hosted at the Mills College Lorry I. Lokey Graduate School of Business in Oakland, California, was a resounding success. We received 68 paper submissions by the deadline, with scholars hailing not just from the United States and Canada but also China, France, Germany, Japan, Italy, Malaysia, the Netherlands, and Russia. In total, there were 77 pre-registered attendees. Clayton Childress delivers his morning keynote address on "Being Passable: The Double Match of Race and Meaning in American Book Publishing" The day kicked off bright and early with a catered breakfast and a welcome from Mills College sociologist Margaret Hunter. This was immediately followed by a fantastic lecture by Clayton Childress of the University of Toronto – Scarborough. In keeping with a tradition begun in 2013, the preconference’s morning keynote slot was reserved for a junior scholar whose work we believe will become central to the field of media sociology in the future. Clayton did not disappoint; his talk on the troubling whiteness of both production and content in American trade book publishing was clearly well-received and provocative. A jam-packed program of panel sessions followed, featuring a diverse range of substantive areas, theories, and methodologies. It was especially fascinating to see the ways in which media sociology intersects with established subfields such as the sociologies of work, race, gender, nationalism, and even the teaching and learning of sociology. Yet there was also plenty of downtime throughout the day to socialize and network over lunch and afternoon coffee, and to explore the idyllic Mills College campus. "Media Sociology as a Vocation" Plenary Panel, featuring (from left to right): Casey Brienza (moderator), Laura Grindstaff, Paul Hirsch, Paul Lopes, Guobin Yang, and Ron Jacobs The preconference concluded with an evening plenary discussion panel on “Media Sociology as a Vocation.” Moderated by myself and featuring Laura Grindstaff, Paul Hirsch, Ron Jacobs, Paul Lopes, and Guobin Yang, this panel focused on various pragmatic, professional, and vocational considerations for--and challenges facing--media sociologists. Panelists discussed lessons from their own career biographies and the importance of interdisciplinarity both within and beyond sociology. They further praised the remarkable breadth of scholarship the preconference had attracted and the novel intellectual linkages the gathering encouraged. Nevertheless, the panelists affirmed, formal legitimation for media sociology within the ASA is absolutely critical. Of particular significance is their recommendation, given the growing role of the media in all arenas of contemporary social life and the enduring popularity of the subject with students, that we do more to lobby Department Chairs/Heads, Deans, and Provosts for faculty lines in media sociology. All in all, it was a productive and exhilarating day, and I was both inspired and humbled by the energy and talent of the media sociologists of the American Sociological Association. Matthias Revers and I continue to advocate for formal recognition for media sociology in the ASA, so if you are current ASA member (regular, student, or emeritus) and would like to see that happen, please do sign the petition. Signing the petition, if you have not already done so, will also keep you updated on the latest news from the section formation campaign. We look forward to seeing you in Chicago in 2015! – Casey Brienza Special thanks to Dan Ryan and to the Mills College Department of Sociology & Anthropology for their generous sponsorship.