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[ecrea] CFP: An Intergenerational Feminist Media Studies: Conflicts and Connectivities
Wed Jan 07 21:58:15 GMT 2015
Call For Papers
An Intergenerational Feminist Media Studies: Conflicts and Connectivities
A special issue of Feminist Media Studies
Edited by Jessalynn Keller, Jo Littler and Alison Winch
This special 15th anniversary issue of Feminist Media Studies will
explore the interconnections between different generations of women and
girls in the contemporary media landscape, building upon several
successful roundtables we convened around this topic in London in autumn
2014.
While feminism has become increasingly visible within western popular
media cultures over the past few years, little scholarly attention has
been paid to the ways in which age and generation shape mediated
conversations about feminist politics globally. This collection will
address this oversight, aiming to problematize dominant media
representations of intergenerational “catfights” and feminist
“bickering,” while simultaneously interrogating the ways in which
mediated conflicts and connectivities shape the potential to work
together to enact feminist social change.
We ask: What kind of shared conversations do women have across age
groups and how do these circulate in media cultures? How can
intergenerational alliances be built while still remaining sensitive to
differences of experience? How are feminist connections being formed via
digital media technologies and platforms? How do new forms of mediated
activism over sexual violence, queerness, racism, and social
reproduction relate to those of their predecessors? How is feminist
conflict mediated and how might it operate productively? How do
particular issues such as “sexualisation” become indicative of
intergenerational conflict?
Considering these questions in relation to the growth of feminist media
studies over the past fifteen years, this issue will simultaneously
foreground how feminist media studies can contribute, and how it has
contributed, to an understanding of such intergenerationality. How do
different generations of feminist media scholars talk to each other?
What impediments arise in these conversations? How do geographical and
cultural locations impact these conversations? How do we theorize these
generational divides and dialogues? Does an effective intergenerational
feminist media studies exist, or do we need to invent or extend it?
Possible paper themes might include, but are not restricted to:
• the mediation of age and ageing
• feminist alliances within austerity and neoliberalism
• feminist ‘waves’ in transnational contexts
• intergenerational activism challenging global power inequalities
• the mediation of feminist conflict and crisis
• intersections of ‘race’, class, sexuality and generation
• generational politics within digital media cultures and practices
• queering feminist media studies
• the legacies of feminist anti-racism
• boys and men as feminist allies
• feminist girls
*Please send 300-500 word abstracts and a 50-word bio by 15th February
2015 to Jessalynn Keller ((j.keller /at/ mdx.ac.uk)
<mailto:(j.keller /at/ mdx.ac.uk)>), Alison Winch ((a.winch /at/ mdx.ac.uk)
<mailto:(a.winch /at/ mdx.ac.uk)>) and Jo Littler ((jo.littler.1 /at/ city.ac.uk)
<mailto:(jo.littler.1 /at/ city.ac.uk)>). *
Final papers will be no more than 8,000 words and will be due 1st
September 2015. Information about Feminist Media Studies can be found here:
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rfms20/current#.VGIbEYdJM7A
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