Call for Book Chapter proposals: "Cultural Hegemony and Media in Politics"
We invite chapter proposals for an edited volume that explores the intersections of cultural hegemony and media in shaping political landscapes, public discourse, and power relations across different contexts. This volume seeks to interrogate how media—traditional and digital—serves as a vehicle for hegemonic ideologies, contestation, and resistance in the political sphere.
Overview
Drawing on the foundational work of Antonio Gramsci and subsequent theoretical and empirical developments, this volume examines the role of media in maintaining or challenging dominant cultural and political narratives. In an age of global crises, misinformation, media concentration, and algorithmic curation, understanding the relationship between media systems and hegemonic power is more critical than ever.
We welcome contributions from scholars across disciplines including media and communication studies, political science, sociology, cultural studies, critical theory, and international relations. Both theoretical reflections and empirical case studies are encouraged.
Possible topics
Themes may include (but are not limited to):
Gramscian and neo-Gramscian analyses of media and hegemony
Media ownership, concentration, and ideological control
Political communication, populism, and cultural narratives
Media, nationalism, and identity politics
Soft power, global media, and international hegemony
Digital platforms, algorithms, and ideological reproduction
News framing, agenda-setting, and political legitimacy
Resistance media and counter-hegemonic discourses
Media representations of class, race, gender, and migration
Post-truth politics, disinformation, and media literacy
Cultural hegemony in authoritarian and democratic regimes
Submission Guidelines
Please submit an abstract of no more than 300 words, along with a short biography (max 150 words), to Dr. Caglar Ezikoglu (c.ezikoglu@bham.ac.uk) by 30 June 2025
Following selection of abstracts, full chapters (6,000–8,000 words, including references) will be due by 30 September 2025. All submissions should be original and not under consideration elsewhere.
This proposal is due on June 30th 2025.
Page last updated on May 14th 2026. All information correct at the time, but subject to change.