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[ecrea] Call for Chapters: Screen Policies: Geographies, Economics, Technologies
Sat Jan 24 22:38:31 GMT 2015
Call for Chapters: Screen Policies: Geographies, Economics, Technologies
Editors: Nolwenn Mingant (Université de Nantes, France), David Newman
(Simon Fraser University, Canada), Cecilia Tirtaine (Université Sorbonne
nouvelle-Paris 3, France)
https://www.academia.edu/10275010/Screen_Policies_Geographies_Economics_Technologies
In 1996, Albert Moran published a seminal overview of film policy in
different parts of the world. Since then, the screen media environment
has significantly changed. Globalization has made the screen media
environment less constrained geographically by impacting the production
and distribution of screen media contents. Technologies have also
revolutionized the media environment. Distribution platforms have
evolved: film is now frequently digital; television content is streamed
over the Internet to a variety of different screens; digital games have
become a much larger and more ubiquitous medium played on a variety of
devices, including cellphones. Growing synergies have appeared between
different media, leading to the idea of ‘transmedia content’ and ‘media
convergence.’
Government and industry policies have adapted to this changed
environment. Film policies have been the first to adapt. Incentive wars
have intensified between different regions across the world seeking to
attract internationally mobile productions. Most States have continued
to worry over suitability of some content for their local audiences, as
reflected through censorship and
ratings schemes. The layering of policies over the intranational,
national and supranational policy regimes has led to more complex
situations. Measures to protect culture and to nurture local screen
industries have been increasingly challenged under international trade
regimes. Whereas previously film was at the centre of cultural policies
globally, those policies are now starting to
incorporate other forms of screen media, notably video games.
Following the success of the CinEcoSA research cycle on Screen Policies
(see www.cinecosa.com), we are now calling for chapter proposals for a
peer-reviewed edited volume to be entitled Screen Policies: Geographies,
Economics and Technologies. This volume will explore and interrogate the
shifts and changes in both government and industry-based screen policies
over the past 30 years.
The volume will cover different types of screens: movie theatres,
television (notably video and videogames), computers (Internet),
smartphones. It will include chapters that cover a diverse range of
screen industries from different parts of the world, along with the
interrelationship between different localities, policy regimes and
technologies/media.
Particular areas we are seeking chapters on include:
Nature of Screen Policies
• Theoretical chapters and /or review of literature on screen policies
around the world
• Case studies of screen industry policy in specific regions,
particularly those outside of Europe and North America (though
contributions from those regions are welcome as well)
• Emerging policies in developing markets
• Motivations of public powers for creating/updating/abandoning screen
policies
• Criteria for aid and impact on screen media policies on media content
• State policies vs. industry-led policy (such as voluntary rating
systems), partnerships between public and private spheres
• Protective policies: censorship, quotas, licensing, copyright
International Relations
• Interrelationships of policy and regulation between local, national
and supra-national institutions
• Influences and impact of international trade regimes on screen policies
• Competition between regions via incentive schemes
• Co-production treaties
• Support for exports
• Role of screen policies in diplomatic relations
New technologies
• Adaptation of screen policies to the new technological context:
adaptation of older models or creation of innovative models?
• Regulation of access to new technologies such as streaming TV, mobile
content, video games
• Support for trans-media initiatives
Please send you proposal (title, 400-word abstract, 4 bibliographical
references, brief biography) to David Newman ((dbnewman /at/ sfu.ca)) and
Nolwenn Mingant
((nolwenn.mingant /at/ univ-nantes.fr)) by March 1st, 2015.
Notification of acceptance: April 30th, 2015.
Completed chapters due August 25th, 2015. Chapter length: 6,000 words
maximum (footnotes and bibliographical references included)
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