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[ecrea] CFP: Exploring Imaginary Worlds -- Audiences, Fan Cultures and Geographies of the Imagination
Sat May 02 16:40:35 GMT 2015
Exploring Imaginary Worlds: Audiences, Fan Cultures and Geographies of
the Imagination
Editors: William Proctor (Bournemouth University) & Richard McCulloch
(Regent’s University London)
Foreword by Mark J.P. Wolf
Writing for the New York Times, A.O. Scott states that 'today there are
hundreds of thousands of people, perhaps millions of people whose grasp
of the history, politics and mythological traditions of entirely
imaginative places could surely qualify them for an advanced degree' (2002).
However, as Mark J.P. Wolf remarks, such ‘imaginary worlds, which rank
among the most elaborate mediated entities, have been largely overlooked
in Media Studies despite a history spanning three millennia’ (2012: 2).
Wolf’s Building Imaginary Worlds and Michael Saler’s As If (2012) are
certainly illustrative of a turning point in the study of world-building
across media platforms, but research to date has tended to restrict
itself to understanding how ‘geographies of the imagination’ (Saler,
2012: 4) function at the level of text. The relationship between these
worlds and those who engage with them – the knowledgeable people to whom
Scott refers – has yet to be explored in significant detail.
Accordingly, this special section of Participations: Journal of Audience
and Reception Studies invites contributions that focus on the various
ways in which audiences explore, interpret and respond to imaginary worlds.
What are the most significant features of these fictional spaces and
places for the world-explorers themselves? How do audiences navigate and
negotiate concepts of canon and continuity, and to what extent these
impact on engagement and enjoyment? Do audiences ‘rummage for
micro-data,’ as Bordwell puts it, and, if so, through what methods and
means is this achieved? How do audiences feel about reboots, retcons,
and other narratives that may contradict, disregard or alter
pre-established continuities?
We are interested in articles that engage with audiences as opposed to
speculative accounts or textual analyses – research that maps specific
communities and their rich relationships with world-building. Materials
in circulation, as in web forums and the like, can be utilized, as can
audience research conducted by the researcher. If building an argument
about how audiences might respond, researchers should consider how to
test and verify their claims. We would also welcome proposals for
methodological articles that address the practical and/or ethical
challenges raised by this kind of research.
Subjects may vary considerably – this list is not exhaustive and the
editors welcome proposals that fit within the widest possible purview of
this project. Similarly, this should not indicate any single medium but
any medium (or combination of media) that engages with story-worlds and
world-building: examples include prose fiction, comic books, TV, film,
theme parks, and any other that meets the requirements of this special
section.
Examples of imaginary worlds may include (but are certainly not limited to):
Lego; Coronation Street; Fifty Shades of Grey; Star Wars; Star Trek;
Eastenders; Game of Thrones; Tolkien; Buffy the Vampire Slayer; Comic
Book Multiverses/Universes; China Mieville; the Alien universe; The
Simpsons; Twin Peaks; Jurassic Park; Discworld; the Marvel (Cinematic)
Universe; Grey’s Anatomy; Ghostbusters.
The deadline for abstracts of 300 words is 26th June 2015, and
notifications of acceptance will be sent out the week commencing 6th July.
First drafts will be due by November 1st 2015, with publication
scheduled for May 2016. Following peer-review, final draft deadline will
be April 1st 2016. Email abstracts to both editors: William Proctor
((bproctor /at/ bournemouth.ac.uk)<mailto:(bproctor /at/ bournemouth.ac.uk)>), and
Richard McCulloch
((mccullochr /at/ regents.ac.uk)<mailto:(mccullochr /at/ regents.ac.uk)>)
Dr. William Proctor
Lecturer in Media, Culture and Communication
UCU JCNC Secretary
The Media School
Bournemouth University
Fern Barrow
Poole
BH12 5BB
Office: W332 (third floor, Weymouth House)
Narrative Research Group (NRG):
http://microsites.bournemouth.ac.uk/cjcr/narrative-research-group/
Centre for the Study of Journalism, Culture and Community
http://research.bournemouth.ac.uk/centre/journalism-culture-and-community/
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