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[ecrea] New call for lesson plans: “Teaching Postfeminism and Media Culture,” Teaching Media Quarterly
Tue Sep 13 06:47:57 GMT 2016
New call for lesson plans: “Teaching Postfeminism and Media Culture,”
Teaching Media Quarterly 4(4)
Submission deadline: Friday, October 28th, 2016
Postfeminism, as an ideology, rests on the assumption that the work of
feminism is done and over. Although that claim may be contested in the
contemporary moment, many post-discourses continue to hold sway in how
we look at, engage with, and interpret media culture. The current
cultural moment is markedly different than that under which theories of
postfeminism were initially imagined - the 2008 recession, the
introduction of discourses of 4th wave feminism, etc.. Thus, in a moment
where past theorizations of postfeminism are being re-imagined and
previous exemplar media texts of postfeminism are largely unfamiliar to
undergraduate students (ex: Ally McBeal, Sex and the City, Buffy the
Vampire Slayer), how we approach teaching this framework must adjust
accordingly. Teaching Media Quarterly is interested in how instructors
are teaching discourses of postfeminism as well as how they are
adjusting previous lesson plans to accommodate new critical scholarship
on this topic. We seek lesson plan submissions geared toward
undergraduate-level students that demonstrate a critical engagement with
postfeminist discourses and media culture.
We are especially interesting in lesson plans that are informed by, but
not limited to, the following questions:
- How do postfeminist discourses intersect with other post- ideologies?
- How can postfeminism be brought into classroom discussions in a manner
that privileges intersectional approaches to understanding identity
including race, class, sexuality, age, and ability?
- How does the way media texts engage with postfeminist discourses vary
depending on genre (fictional television, reality television,
advertising, film, etc.), medium, and/or location?
For submission instructions go to
http://www.teachingmedia.org/call-for-proposals/.
Teaching Media Quarterly Submission Guidelines
All submissions must include: 1) a title, 2) an overview (word limit:
500 words) 3) comprehensive rationale (using accessible language explain
the purpose of the assignment(s), define key terms, and situate in
relevant literature) (word limit: 500), 4) a general timeline, 5) a
detailed lesson plan and assignment instructions, 6) teaching materials
(handouts, rubrics, discussion prompts, viewing guides, etc.), 7) a full
bibliography of readings, links, and/or media examples, and 8) a short
biography (100-150 words). All citations must be in Chicago Author-Date
style.
Please email all submissions using the TMQ Submission Template (.docx)
in ONE Microsoft Word document to (teachingmedia.contact /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(teachingmedia.contact /at/ gmail.com)>.
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