CORECON Conference July 9-11, 2025

Rationale

Often referred to as the “Second Cold War” or even the “Third World War,” the Russian-Ukrainian conflict is undoubtedly not only one of the major events of our time, but one that looks set to profoundly influence history for decades to come. Yet, the military and economic conflict is only the flip side of an ideological and informational conflict that has already polarized the entire planet. How to detect the truth beyond the propagandas and identify the rhetorical strategies by which the producers of various discourses try to manipulate others? In an era of “post-truth”, when AI tends to substitute or even create reality, such a question acquires a new relevance and high urgency that calls for interdisciplinary and collaborative research. However, in order to answer it, the most suitable investigation should start not from the belligerent camps (where propagandas reign), but from the analysis of the variety of mediated discourses promoted by third parties. Of course, “objectivity” in the traditional sense of the term is a mere illusion.

Questions

  • How does the geopolitical position of a society or a state compare to the ways the Russian-Ukrainian war is reflected in the media?
  • What are the dominant meanings and implicit ideologies in discourses about the war in various countries?
  • How do mediated accounts of war become embedded in cultural narratives, historical memory and social processes?
  • What is the role of media technologies in shaping the imaginaries of war and conflict?
  • How can critical media research on war discourse translate into journalistic practices of war coverage?

And offer a methodological reflection on:

  • What are the most useful tools of linguistic analysis to understand the complexity of the mediations of Russian-Ukrainian war?
  • What can quantitative and/or computational investigations tell us about Russian-Ukrainian war discourses?
  • How can the critical and interdisciplinary approaches be synergized to explore various representations of war?
  • How to ensure the ethics and integrity of researching war and conflicts?

Fields of study

  • Linguistics;
  • Media/journalism studies;
  • War studies;
  • History;
  • Sociology;
  • Psychology;
  • Literary and cultural studies;
  • Postcommunist studies;
  • Area studies;
  • Interdisciplinary approaches.

Abstract sumbission

Please submit an abstract (200-300 words) along with a brief bio (100 words) to grant.corecon@ulbsibiu.ro. Proposals should include the title of the paper, the main arguments, alongside the methodologies employed.

Keynote speaker:

Valentyna Ushchyna – Professor of the English Philology at Lesya Ukrainka Volyn National University of Lutsk

FROM CONFLICT OF DISCOURSE TO MILITARY CONFLICT: MEDIA CONSTRUCTION OF WORLDVIEW NARRATIVES 

This talk will attempt to grasp the discursive nature of Russo-Ukrainian war. The critical discourse analysis of the conflictual ways of the Russian and Ukrainian identities construction in discourse and by discourse can shed light onto the covert reasons of the unprovoked military aggression Russia has been executing against Ukraine. The argument is based on the idea that identity is a manifold composite of stances taken by individual as well as collective speakers in various situations of communication. Having an epistemic and affective dimension, stances are inherently interactive, and, thus, have collective or social nature. Generally speaking, conflictual stances, built in war discourse, express national, political, or sociological worldviews of the stance-takers, reflecting their ideologies, values, and beliefs. The way people see the conflict and thus construct their corresponding stances,  differs according to what “frames” they choose to see it through. The frames circumscribing Ukrainian and Russian conflictual identities, as they are built in Ukrainian and Russian media discourse, can be grasped through language used to represent the conflict. As there are diverse semiotic systems to create, transmit and understand meanings (e.g., verbal and non-verbal, written and oral, visual and audial), various modalities employed in the process of discursive construction of these identities should be taken into consideration.

Fees: There is no conference fee and meals are provided onsite. Participants are obliged to arrange their own accommodation and travel.

Post-conference publishing opportunities: Selected conference papers will be offered a publication option in a dedicated volume within Springer’s “The Language of Politics” book series, following review.

You can download the call in PDF format here: