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[ecrea] CFP - European Journal of Cultural Studies -- Special Issue
Mon Apr 19 13:47:14 GMT 2010
>Call for Papers European Journal of Cultural Studies Special Issue
>
>**Submission Deadline: 31st December 2010**
>
>Cultural Intermediaries in Context:
>Locating Identity and Practice in the Formation of Value
>
>Guest Co-Editors: Jennifer Smith Maguire
>(University of Leicester); Julian Matthews (University of Leicester)
>
>
>There has been an increase in research around
>cultural intermediaries in recent years, jumping
>off from Special Issues in Cultural Studies in
>2002, and Consumption, Markets and Culture in
>2004. This Special Issue is intended to move the
>field forward by foregrounding the issue of
>context: how does location (across and within
>cultural fields; across and within societies;
>across and within time periods) impact on the
>identities and practices of cultural
>intermediaries? The Special Issue will offer a
>timely collection that examines the present
>understanding of the cultural intermediary, and
>the materiality of their cultural work in the formation of value.
>
>The operations of cultural intermediaries in
>commodity chains have developed as a recent
>focus of attention for the sociology of culture
>and cultural studies. Rooted in the work of
>Bourdieu (1984), and taken up within discussions
>of a radically new stage of capitalism (e.g.
>Featherstone 1991; Lash & Urry 1987), cultural
>intermediaries have more recently been the focus
>of a range of studies loosely grouped under the
>banner of cultural economy (e.g. du Gay and
>Pryke, 2002). This body of research has examined
>the role of cultural intermediaries in mediating
>between the production and consumption of
>cultural goods, and their place more generally
>within the organization of economic and cultural
>life. However, attention to cultural
>intermediaries identities and lifestyles has
>yet to be fully integrated with close
>investigation of their material practices of
>mediation. Furthermore, research has thus far
>focused largely on single case studies of
>occupations, despite the clear significance of
>cultural location and context for the formation
>of valuefor example, at different stages within
>the career (Méadel and Rabeharisoa 2001) of a
>product, or for the same occupation operating
>within different fields. Thus, the
>interconnections of various intermediaries
>operating in and across various fields, and how
>such cultural work can be conceptualised
>generally remain fertile areas for further study, discussion and debate.
>
>Empirically-grounded contributions might
>consider a range of issues including, but not confined to:
>" theoretical conceptualizations of the
>cultural intermediary and the intersection of
>identity and practice (including the tensions
>and synergies present in definitions of the
>cultural intermediary and their work, as offered
>by Bourdieu and later cultural economy studies);
>" the role of context (including
>education, patterns of professionalization,
>class habitus) in the formation of cultural
>intermediary dispositions and the tensions
>that arise between objective credentials and
>subjective dispositions, intuition, aesthetic
>sensibilities and so forth in the performance of authority;
>" the role of cultural location in the
>selection and deployment of devices for the
>formation of value (including the specific,
>material practices involved in bringing goods to
>market, identifying (with) and understanding the
>intended market, performing credibilityfor
>themselves and their goodsvia the mobilization
>of different forms of capital, and so forth);
>" the ecology of cultural intermediaries
>within commodity chains (the regimes of
>mediation (Cronin 2004), and the status,
>relative weight and interconnections of cultural
>intermediaries operating within the same and across fields);
>" cross-cultural comparisons of cultural
>intermediaries operating within the same field,
>and cross-field comparisons of cultural
>intermediaries operating at comparable positions
>in different commodity chains (calling attention
>to the relative universality, or cultural- or
>field- specificity, of particular forms of value and their production);
>" comparisons of cultural intermediaries
>operating in the same field, but working with
>goods that occupy different status positions
>(calling attention to the question of autonomy
>for those working with goods of restricted
>production compared with those working with goods of mass production).
>
>Submissions:
>
>The deadline for papers is 31st December 2010.
>
>If you have any queries regarding the
>suitability of your potential contribution
>please contact either of the guest co-editors:
>Jennifer Smith Maguire (jbs7 /at/ le.ac.uk)
>Julian Matthews (jpm29 /at/ le.ac.uk)
>
>Submissions should be sent electronically as
>Word documents to Jennifer Smith Maguire (email:
>(jbs7 /at/ le.ac.uk)). If this is not possible, then
>please send five copies to Jennifer Smith
>Maguire, Department of Media & Communication,
>University of Leicester, University Road, Leicester, LE1 7RH, UK.
>
>Papers, in English, should include an abstract
>of 100-150 words, with a suggested target of
>about 7000 words (including notes and
>references). For specific manuscript submission guidelines, please go to:
>http://www.uk.sagepub.com/journalsProdManSub.nav?prodId=Journal200898&crossRegion=antiPod
>
>
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Nico Carpentier (Phd)
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Vrije Universiteit Brussel - Free University of Brussels
Centre for Studies on Media and Culture (CeMeSO)
Pleinlaan 2 - B-1050 Brussels - Belgium
T: ++ 32 (0)2-629.18.56
F: ++ 32 (0)2-629.36.84
Office: 5B.401a
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European Communication Research and Education Association
Web: http://www.ecrea.eu
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E-mail: (Nico.Carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
Web: http://homepages.vub.ac.be/~ncarpent/
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