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[ecrea] Call for papers- Place Power Media
Tue Jan 20 00:59:05 GMT 2015
CALL FOR PAPERS
The anthology Place, Power, Media aims to study how place, as
represented in mediated texts, is transformed through the imperatives of
globalization, while at the same time offering forms of localized
resistance to such processes.
The core argument of this anthology is that it is in the analysis of
place making that we recognize, engage with, and exert agency on the
neocolonial conditions of globalization. This focus marks a departure
from both reductionist tendencies of globalization studies and the
obsession with the past that entraps revisionist postcolonial studies,
as well as Indigenous approaches that seek to assert the particularities
of cultural belonging.
An initial proposal has already caught the interest of a few leading
publishers and we are excited to put forth a Call for Papers for the
anthology, described further below.
Place is an emotionally charged and culturally contested category in our
current moment of globalization. The construction, configuration,
restoration, and representation of place is an important project at
multiple levels: what meanings are derived from it, what meanings are
infused, who are the key players, what power struggles are
inherent—these issues offer rich areas of study for global media scholars.
This anthology brings together critical analyses of mediated texts such
as television, news media, community media, and social/digital media
that interrogate the notion of place in response to the pressures of
globalization. Careful choreography and meticulous editing in televisual
texts for example, can transform messy, real, noisy, and dusty locales
into charming, friendly, progressive, and colorful sites for consumption.
What are the implications of such “sanitization” for how consumers
engage in political, social, economic, and cultural processes that shape
their present and future, and that may very well reconfigure their pasts?
How have local media producers drawn on global frameworks, practices and
aesthetic norms to articulate the particularities of their place? Which
expressions of place are lost or intensified in these encounters with
the global?
This anthology aims to build theory that links Indigenous, postcolonial
and globalization studies and paves the way for further critical
analyses of the interplay between power and place in globalizing
economies. In its focus on the aesthetics and practices that rework
geographical locations, the anthology will include studies of a variety
of mediated texts including film, television, radio, social media, news
and community-based media initiatives, to explore how reconfigurations
of place, in turn, introduce incremental shifts in global flows that
might facilitate "opportunistic encounters" of resistance and interruption.
The distinction of this anthology will be in its interdisciplinary focus
on the relationships among Indigenous, postcolonial, and globalization
discourses and their implications for a range of contemporary media
practices. We offer an anthology that focuses on how place-making media
strategies, from a range of inter- and intra-national locations, draw on
normative models of media that have a global purchase. As such, the
anthology takes seriously the historical and contemporary conditions
underpinning everyday media practices by offering a synthesis of
Indigenous and postcolonial concerns framed through the larger lens of
globalization.
We welcome papers from established and emerging critical scholars of
Indigenous, postcolonial and global media, that:
? Illustrate how media technologies produce space for local and foreign
consumption.
? Explore how media genres and forms such as lifestyle television,
community radio, and social media configure “reality” by drawing on
notions of place.
? Reveal the contradictions and dynamics of complicity of globalization
through the study of place-making media technologies and modes of production
? Enhance our understanding of local adaptations of global formats for
non-western and indigenous communities
? Use ethnographic methods such as audience research or projects with
media producers to illustrate ways in which people negotiate a sense of
place through media.
? Build theory on the relevance of place, particularly as cities or
regions (as subnational units) attempt to link to global circuits
sometimes working with and sometimes working against national efforts to
do the same
? Expand research on key concepts in global media studies such as
synchronicity and contemporaneity
? Expand research on key concepts in postcolonial studies such as
opportunism, hybridity, and encounter
? Expand research on key concepts in Indigenous studies such as
sovereignty, complicity, and translation
? Build scholarship on ethical considerations in such “transformational”
texts as we evaluate how colonial pasts continue to inform the
globalized present.
Timeline
Authors are invited submit 500-750 word abstracts by April 1, 2015 and
complete chapters no later than September 1, 2015 to:
Divya McMillin :(divya /at/ uw.edu)
Professor of Global Media Studies
Director of the Institute for Global Engagement
University of Washington Tacoma
Box 358457
1900 Commerce Street
Tacoma, WA 98422-3100
USA
Editor bios-
Divya McMillin is Professor of Global Media Studies in the School of
Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences and Director of the Institute for
Global Engagement and the Global Honors Program at the University of
Washington Tacoma. She is author of International Media Studies
(Blackwell 2007) and Mediated Identities: Youth, Agency, and
Globalization (Peter Lang, 2009). McMillin’s research on media
globalization and audiences has been published in such journals as the
Journal of Communication, Popular Communication Journal, International
Journal of Cultural Studies, Economic and Political Weekly, Continuum:
Journal of Media and Cultural Studies, Indian Journal of Gender Studies,
and the International Communication Bulletin, to name a few. She has
published extensively on global television and hybridity in such
anthologies as Critical Asian Histories (2015, Routledge), TV’s Betty
Goes Global (2013, I.B. Tauris), Re-Orienting Global Communication
(2010, University of Illinois Press), South Asian Technospaces (2008,
Peter Lang), Girl Wide Web (2006, Peter Lang) and Planet TV(2003, New
York University Press).
Joost de Bruin is Senior Lecturer in Media Studies at Victoria
University of Wellington in Aotearoa / New Zealand. He teaches in the
areas of audience studies, television studies, popular culture and media
and cultural identity. He has published articles in journals such as
Television and New Media, Continuum, Media International Australia and
Participations. With Koos Zwaan, he co-edited a volume on the Idols
television format: Adapting Idols: Authenticity, Identity and
Performance in a Global Television Format (2012, Ashgate). He has
published chapters in anthologies on global television formats and
indigenous media.
Jo Smith is Senior Lecturer, Media Studies at Victoria University of
Wellington
Aotearoa/New Zealand. Smith’s research on Indigenous and Postcolonial
media has been published in journals such as Continuum: Journal of Media
and Cultural Studies, Studies in Australasian Cinema, Transnational
Cinemas, The Australasian Journal of Popular Culture, Settler Colonial
Studies and Arena to name a few. Her book chapters have been published
in anthologies such as Settler and Creole Re-enactment (2010, Palgrave
MacMillan), Film and Television After DVD (2008, Routledge), Studying
the Event Film: The Lord of the Rings (2008, Manchester University
Press), Contemporary New Zealand Cinema (2008, Wayne State University
Press), The Fourth Eye: Maori Media in Aotearoa New Zealand (2013,
University of Minnesota Press) The Oxford Handbook of Postcolonial
Studies (2013, Oxford University Press) and Huihui: Navigating Art and
Literature in the Pacific (2014, University of Hawai’i Press). She is
currently writing a book about Maori Television, the Indigenous
broadcaster based in Aotearoa/New Zealand.
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