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[ecrea] CFP: Studying Selfies: Evidence, Affect, Ethics, and the Internet’s Visual Turn
Wed Apr 16 12:19:00 GMT 2014
Studying Selfies: Evidence, Affect, Ethics, and the Internet’s Visual Turn
A special section of the International Journal of Communication (IJoC)
Guest-edited by:
Dr. Theresa Senft
Master Teacher in Global Liberal Studies
New York University
(Terri.senft /at/ nyu.edu)
Dr. Nancy Baym
Principal Researcher
Microsoft Research
(baym /at/ microsoft.com)
Overview
The fact that “selfie” was Oxford English Dictionary’s word of the year
for 2013 indicates that the selfie is a topic of popular interest. Yet
for scholars, the selfie phenomenon represents a paradox. As an object,
the selfie lends itself to cultural scorn and shaming. As a cultural
practice, however, selfie circulation grows by the moment, moving far
beyond the clichéd province of bored teenagers online. The rapid spread
of camera-enabled mobile phones worldwide means that selfies have become
a global phenomenon. Yet dominant discourses about what selfies are, and
what they mean, tend to be extremely U.S. focused.
In this special section, we aim to provide international perspectives on
selfies. As an act of production, we are interested in why
selfie-making lends itself to discussions featuring words like
“narcissistic” or “empowering.” As a media genre, we are interested in
the relationship of the selfie to documentary, autobiography,
advertising, and celebrity. As a cultural signifier, we ask: What
social work does a selfie do in communities where it was intended to
circulate, and what happens when it circulates beyond those communities?
As an emblematic part of the social media’s increased “visual turn,”
selfies provide opportunities for scholars to develop best practices for
interpreting images online in rigorous ways. Case studies of selfie
production, consumption and circulation can also provide much needed
insight into the social dynamics at play on popular social media
platforms like Facebook, Instagram, Reddit, WeChat and Tumblr.
We are seeking scholarly articles from diverse fields, and a wide range
of theoretical and methodological approaches, including: media studies,
communication, anthropology, digital humanities, computational and
social sciences, cultural geography, history, and critical cultural studies.
Possible topics include, but are not limited to:
Selfie as discourse: What is the history (or histories) of the selfie?
How do these histories map to contemporary media and scholarly
discourses regarding self-representation, autobiography, photography,
amateurism, branding, and/or celebrity?
Selfie as evidence: What are the epistemological ramifications of the
selfie? How do selfies function as evidence that one attended an event,
feels intimate with a partner, was battered in a parking lot, is willing
to be “authentic” with fans, or claims particular standing in a social
or political community? One uploaded, how do selfies become evidence of
a different sort, subject to possibilities like “revenge porn,” data
mining, or state surveillance?
Selfie as affect: What feelings do selfies elicit for those who produce,
view, and/or circulate them? What are we to make of controversial genres
like infant selfies, soldier selfies, selfies with homeless people, or
selfies at funerals? How do these discourses about controversial selfies
map to larger conversations about “audience numbness” and “empathy
deficit” in media?
Selfie as ethics: Who practices “empowering” selfie generation? Who does
not? Who cannot? How do these questions map to larger issues of class,
race, gender, sexuality, religion and geography? What responsibilities
do those who circulate selfies of others have toward the original
creator of the photo? What is the relationship between selfies and other
forms of documentary photography, with regard to ethics?
Selfie as pedagogy: How can selfies be used as case studies to better
understand the visual turn in social media use? How do selfies “speak,”
and what methods might we develop to better understand what is being said?
Formatting and Requirements
To be considered for this collection, a paper of maximum 5,000 words
(including images with captions, footnotes, references and appendices,
if any) must be submitted by June 15, 2014. All submissions should be
accompanied by two to three suggested reviewers including their e-mail
addresses, titles, affiliations and research interests. Submissions will
fall under the category of “Features” which are typically shorter than
full research articles.
All submissions must adhere strictly to the most recent version of the
APA styleguide (including in-text citations and references). Papers
must include the author(s) name, title, affiliation and e-mail address.
Any papers that do not follow these guidelines will not be submitted for
peer review.
The International Journal of Communication is an open access journal
(ijoc.org). All articles will be available online at the point of
publication. The anticipated publication timeframe for this special
section is March 2015.
Contact Information
All submissions should be emailed to (ijocselfieissue /at/ outlook.com) by June
15, 2014. Late submissions will not be included for consideration.
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