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‘Are you for real?’: New webinar series to examine the significance of authenticity in the contemporary world

Authenticity has become a buzzword for our times. The travel industry is full of companies providing ‘authentic’ experiences, global brands fight to be seen as ‘authentic’ and social media platforms are awash with arguments about the authenticity of posts and even influencers.

But what we do mean by authenticity? And why have these debates grown so dramatically in the last two decades?

º¬Ðß²ÝÊÓƵ’s Centre for Research in Communications and Culture is hosting a new series of webinars in a bid to provide answers to these and other related questions.

Commencing this autumn, the four-part series will feature high-profile social sciences scholars from around the globe, including Professor Sharon Zukin of City University, New York, and Professor Sarah Banet-Weiser, of the London School of Economics.

The series will kick off with a webinar on ‘Cities and Urban Culture’ on Thursday 29 October and will be followed by talks on ‘Place and Heritage’, ‘Social Media and Digital Communication’ and ‘Gender and Identity’.

The webinars will take place every Thursday from 29 October – 19 November and will be aired from 2pm-4.30pm, except from the penultimate talk which will take place 10am-12.30pm.

The series organisers Dr Michael Skey and Dr Thomas Thurnell-Read say they are “thrilled to be able to welcome such high-profile researchers to the university” and are “excited at the response to the announcement of the webinar series, which has generated widespread interest around the globe.”

In a joint statement, they said: “The concept of authenticity has a long history, having first emerged as a response to the processes of homogenisation, rationalisation and standardisation at the heart of modernity.

“In recent years, authenticity has again come to the fore where social, political, cultural and technological upheavals give rise to feelings of distrust, detachment and alienation against which supposedly authentic people, places and things are sought out for their reassuring certainty and value.

“Yet, there are huge contradictions and inequalities in who can make claim to authenticity and its construction and communication invariably involves competing narratives and oppositional assertions about what is authentic and how and why the authentic gains its value.

“The purpose of the webinars – and of an edited book planned to follow the series – is to provide a space for scholars interested in the culture, politics and ethics of authenticity to share their research and insights and together examine the continued salience of this concept to understanding of contemporary social, cultural and political life.”

Each webinar features a keynote speaker followed by a panel of three to four research presentations and time for questions and discussion. 

Registration is free and can be done via the individual links included in the session summaries, which include further details on each talk, on the event’s information page here.

Notes for editors

Press release reference number: 20/158

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