Archive for March 2012

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[ecrea] Cfp Northern Lights Spring 2013: Age, generation and the media

Wed Mar 28 14:45:11 GMT 2012




Call for Papers: Volume 11 - Themed Issue

Age, generation and the media
Spring 2013 (Eds: Eli Skogerbø&  Göran Bolin)

The media landscape is more diverse than ever. The traditional media -- TV, radio, newspapers and magazines, film and music -- continuously diversify their products and enter new platforms. In addition, new social networking and personal web-based media have expanded extending our communication spaces.
For media producers this brings with it increased competition for target audiences. Formats, programmes and genres are designed and specifically tailored to fit specific audience groups in order to satisfy the advertisers’ need to more effectively capture digital consumers. Young audience segments are typically targeted as they are conceived of as heavy consumers and trend-setters, but also because these audiences bring symbolic values to the products they are believed to desire. The targeting is often formed in terms of points of identification, which traditionally has led to over-representation of certain age groups in media content, and a corresponding under-representation of others.
Media consumption is, as we know, divided in terms of social and demographic variables. In the Nordic countries the oldest age groups in general watch more TV, read more newspapers, and listen more to radio than younger groups, whereas the pattern is the opposite regarding the use of Internet, blogs, the advanced functions on smartphones and other mobile personal media. Interestingly, some age gaps seem to be closing; the use of the Internet, some uses of the mobile phone, and social networking sites such as Facebook are increasingly used by older segments. Yet other gaps are widening. The dynamics of this development are yet to be fully explored, and especially the elderly and the older age groups are rarely singled out as an important target group for advertisers, nor have they to any extent been the main focus for media research. While the elderly seem a neglected research topic, there is an abundance of studies examining media use and preferences of the young, often highlighting innovative and/or dangerous media use.
Northern Lights invites theoretical and empirical articles on the theme ‘Age, generations and the media’. We especially encourage cross-age/generation analysis and focusing on the older age groups as mediated representations, target groups, media users, interpreting subjects, etc. Research themes and questions may include (but are not restricted to):
•	Comparative cross-generational studies of media use
•	Techno-generational divides
•	Age and/or generation-specific contents
•	Age and generations as target groups
•	Generational segmentation in production
•	Generational experience in reception
•	Niche markets for the older age groups
•	Representations of age and generation in news, fiction and entertainment
•	Media generations as theoretical and empirical categories
•	Interrelations of age/generation and media content
•	Historical analysis of media in generational perspectives (e.g. how certain media have been defining for some generations).
•	Representations of age in the media (advertising, news, entertainment, life-style magazines)
•	The role of age and generations for the interpretation and reception of media content.

Send abstracts of 3-400 words to (eli.skogerbo /at/ media.uio.no) and (goran.bolin /at/ sh.se)
Deadline for abstract submission: 15 April 2012.
Notification of authors: 15 May 2012
Final article submission: 1 October 2012.
See more about information on Northern Lights, including style guide for authors, at http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-journal,id=143/

Aims and Scope of the Journal
Northern Lights: Film and Media Studies Yearbook
is a peer reviewed international yearbook started in 2002 and dedicated to studies of film and media. Each yearbook is devoted to a specific theme. In addition, every volume may include articles on other topics as well as review articles. The yearbook wants to further interdisciplinary studies of media with a special emphasis on film, television and new media. Since the yearbook was founded in Scandinavia, the editors feel a special obligation towards Scandinavian and European perspectives.
But in a global media world it is important to have a global perspective on media culture. The yearbook is therefore open to all relevant aspects of film and media culture: We want to publish articles of excellent quality that are worth reading and have direct relevance for both academics in the broad, interdisciplinary field of media studies in both humanities and social sciences and for students in that area. But we also want to appeal to a broader public interested in thorough and well-written articles on film and other media.

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Eli Skogerbø
Professor

Institutt for medier og kommunikasjon/ Department of Media and Communication
Universitetet i Oslo/University of Oslo
Pb/P.O.Box 1093 Blindern
0317 Oslo, Norway

Tlf +47 22850429, Mob. +47 905 61 275, Fax +47 22850401
(skogerbo /at/ ulrik.uio.no)
http://www.hf.uio.no/imk/english/people/aca/skogerbo/index.html









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