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[ecrea] Call for chapters - Handbook of Diasporas, Media and Culture (Wiley Blackwell)

Tue Sep 15 10:22:25 GMT 2015




Call for Chapters - Handbook of Diasporas, Media and Culture (Wiley Blackwell)
Editors: Jessica Retis and Roza Tsagarousianou

Aim of the handbook

The aim of the Handbook of Diasporas, Media and Culture is to provide an authoritative outline of the relevant intellectual terrain by presenting key debates and state-of-the-art research on the intersection of diasporic phenomena, media and cultural studies.

The handbook is envisaged to make a contribution to better understanding diasporic cultures and their impact on our globalized world, the complex networks and flows that underpin it and the transnational cultural politics and practices that are emerging.

More precisely, the handbook is intended to
• trace and explore the multiple roots of diasporic studies in migration, globalization and transnationalism debates; • identify and present the key theoretical perspectives, paradigms and focal areas of investigation; • provide an overview of the evolution of the field in interaction with developments in broader debates on diasporas, media technologies, transnational and local media configurations, media audiences and users;
• identify and present key empirical research and case study exemplars;
• explore current challenges and future directions in research.

Key Questions
Key questions include:
• When and how did the notion of diaspora and diasporic cultures emerge? What were the reasons for this? What was the contribution of this terminological and conceptual innovation? • What is the nature of 'diaspora(s)', their relation to nation, ethnicity, religion, societies of provenance and societies of settlement? What is distinctive about diasporic phenomena and warrants their investigation as a particular object of enquiry? • How are notions of the global, local and transnational articulated in the study of diasporas? What is the place of diasporas in the geographies of flows and networks of late modernity? • How have diasporic cultural politics been approached? How have issues such as the emergence of diasporic public spheres/spaces, identity politics, diasporic activism/voice been addressed in the relevant research? • What is the impact of the changing media, information and communication technologies on diasporic cultures, public spaces but also domestic and family life (transnational households)? • In what ways do the politics and structures of ethnic broadcasting provide spaces for diasporic cultural expression and identification? • How are contemporary diasporas transforming new developments in global cities and urban contexts? • How do gender and generation intersect with the diasporic condition and impact on diasporic cultural politics? • Can the avenues of investigation and debates developed within diasporic research be extended to better understand broader transnational/translocal processes – for example the emergence and consolidation of Hispanic, African, Muslim translocal cultural politics? • What are the key questions that are becoming central in the agenda of the relevant international research community?

The handbook takes an interdisciplinary approach to diasporic media and culture and will bring together internationally recognised scholars from around the world and research that has informed the field. We are actively seeking contributions, from various disciplines, that advance our understanding of diasporas, diasporic cultures and cultural politics (past, present and future), diasporic media and cultural resources, forms of organisations and expression as well as production, distribution, and consumption. This volume will be published by Blackwell as part of the prestigious series The Global Handbooks in Media and Communication Research, designed to define an intellectual terrain: its historic emergence; its key theoretical paradigms; its transnational evolution, its key empirical research and possible future directions. For more information and examples of the series see: http://eu.wiley.com/WileyCDA/Section/id-410903.html Submissions will be assessed for their scholarly merit and the extent to which they contribute to our greater understanding of diasporic cultures and communication. Contributors should limit their articles to between 6000 and 8000 words (including references). Abstracts (250 words) are due by 20 November 2015 and should be sent to Roza Tsagarousianou ((tsagarr /at/ westminster.ac.uk)) and Jessica Retis ((jessica.retis /at/ gmail.com))
Upon acceptance, full articles will be due by 1 September 2016.
The University of Westminster is a charity and a company limited by guarantee. Registration number: 977818 England. Registered Office: 309 Regent Street, London W1B 2UW.

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