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This PhD position is part of an interdisciplinary project on play and politics, which is conducted by a team of closely collaborating scholars: Prof. dr. Sybille Lammes; Prof. dr. Frans-Willem Korsten, Dr. Frank Chouraqui, Dr. Alex Gekker, Dr. Bram Ieven, and Dr. Sara Polak.
We are looking for an excellent, highly motivated, creative and collaborative PhD candidate to join our project Playing Politics: Media Platforms, Making Worlds. Our project analyses how playful affordances of current media platforms have substantially altered the way in which political actors (politicians, citizens and other stakeholders) respond to, promulgate, and frame political issues. Our hypothesis is that ludic or game-like forms of political mediation or ‘casual politicking’ use such platforms to whimsically and capriciously create worlds, which has made political force fields less predictable. Such ludic or game-like forms manifest themselves as gender-trolling, the use of humorous contradictions, or post-truth discourses, and meme-sharing. This change in how politics is done calls for a reconsideration of how politics works. By analysing ludo-political practices on media platforms, examining the ontological relation between play, contemporary politics and world-making, and theoretically examining media affordances in relation to play and politics, we build an innovative approach for understanding this shift. The project will set a new benchmark for understanding contemporary mediatised politics. It does so by building a comparative conceptual and methodological framework informed by media studies, play studies and philosophy. From this interdisciplinary outset it will develop a much-needed vocabulary to analyse and critically engage with the workings of politics in contemporary post-digital culture.
You will engage with the work of play theorist Brian Sutton-Smith (2001), who argued that it is difficult to understand and define play as it is in essence ambiguous. Through this perspective you will examine social media platforms where political messages shift rapidly in tone and style. The question is: How are playful ambiguities used politically on media platforms and does this require a reconsideration of the seven ambiguities as theorised by Sutton-Smith? To interrogate this you will focus on moments when playful ambiguities become untenable and processes of escalation kick in, by focusing on three cases — trolling, warring, and shaming — from three different media platforms. You will analyse what happens at such occasions when ambiguity is destabilised and playful tactics ‘spill over’ into more risky endeavours. The project traces how these crisis points are reached and concentrates on the potentials of escalation that play and politics share.
Your project will be part of the first subproject ‘Media Platforms, Play, Politics’ that besides of your research part consists of
Key responsibilities
PhD project, 4 years (38 hrs per week), starting date 1 November 2021. Initially the employee will receive a one-year contract, with extension for the following 36 months on condition of a positive evaluation. Salary range from € 2,548.- to € 3,111.- gross per month for a full time appointment (pay scale P, in accordance with the Collective Labour Agreement for Dutch Universities).
Leiden University offers an attractive benefits package with additional holiday (8%) and end-of-year bonuses (8.3 %), training and career development and sabbatical leave. Our individual choices model gives you some freedom to assemble your own set of terms and conditions. Candidates from outside the Netherlands may be eligible for a substantial tax break. For more information, see the website.
Diversity
Leiden University is strongly committed to diversity within its community and especially welcomes applications from members of underrepresented groups.
Leiden University’s Faculty of Humanities is rich in expertise in fields such as philosophy, religious studies, history, art history, literature, linguistics and area studies covering nearly every region of the world. With its staff of 995, the faculty provides 27 master’s and 25 bachelor’s programmes for over 7,000 students based at locations in Leiden and in The Hague.
The Leiden University Centre for the Arts in Society (LUCAS) is an international, interdisciplinary research institute of the Faculty of Humanities at Leiden University. The Institute hosts academic disciplines and fields in which the relationship between art, popular culture, and society is studied. Strengthened by a great diversity of perspectives and research areas – from art history to media studies; and from early modern theatre to interactive games – the institute strives for a deeper understanding of the historical, creative and social aspects of culture and the arts from classical antiquity to the contemporary world. For more information, see the website of Humanities.
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