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[ecrea] CFP_Photography and Gender
Fri Jun 16 22:53:50 GMT 2017
*CALL FOR PAPERS*
Journal “Comunicação e Sociedade”, no 32
Communication and Society Research Centre, University of Minho, Portugal
Special Issue:
*Photography and Gender*
Editors: Maria da Luz Correia ((maria.lf.correia /at/ uac.pt)
<mailto:(maria.lf.correia /at/ uac.pt)>) and Carla Cerqueira
((carlaprec /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(carlaprec /at/ gmail.com)>)
Languages: bilingual| Portuguese and English*
The generalization of photography between the end of the century XIX and
the beginning of the XX century was a determining factor for the
recognition of a collective social iconography. This recognition, which
was exemplified already in the visionary thinking of philosophers like
Walter Benjamin or art historians like Aby Warburg, would nevertheless
be strengthened in the second half of the XX century, due to a renewed
concern with the asymmetries of the gaze that would cross this prolific
visual culture: the theory of the panoptic society introduced by Michel
Foucault in 1975 is particularly illustrative of this. Methodologies
inserted in post-structuralism, but also in cultural studies, in visual
culture Studies, in feminist and postcolonial studies are exemplary of
this paradigm of political questioning and visual criticism. On the
basis of this assumption, this issue deals specifically with the
photographic device and gender inequalities, often intertwined with
other social inequalities, which are affirmed and denied by this and
through it.
Since John Berger laid the groundwork for a feminist analysis of
painting and advertising in 1972’s Ways of Seeing, and Laura Mulvey
coined the term male gaze on the subject of cinema in 1975, Studies that
focus on gender asymmetries – and the tendentiously stereotyped
representations associated with women and men – which are often
confirmed and often challenged by the photographic medium have followed.
On the one hand, photographic narratives and practices that stabilize
and/or destabilize these asymmetries have been the object of critical
photography in its different thematic scopes: family photography,
documentary photography, scientific photography, police photography,
erotic photography, photography of modern and contemporary art,
journalistic photography, advertising photography ... On the other hand,
studies on women, on gender and feminist studies have sought to analyze
various types of media and cultural production, where photography also
appears as a focus for Research, whether as a means of reproducing
gender asymmetries and the dominant social order, or as a means of
social resistance. How it is produced, who produces it, what is produced
and how this production is negotiated between producers, consumers and
publics are some of the cores of this questioning, which not only cross
photography and gender, but also interweave cultural and technological
issues.
The meeting between of photography studies and gender studies has
already established a vast domain of interdisciplinary study, in which
recurrent historical episodes and scientific landmarks which are worth
remembering stand out, like photographs of an album that this thematic
issue intends to enlarge. The photographic iconography of the
Salpêtrière Hospital hysteria – psychiatric hospital and asylum
exclusively for female patients which had, at the end of the XIX
century, a department exclusively dedicated to photography; the
representations of the Kodak Girls, introduced in 1893, in the context
of the Chicago Universal Exposition and the generality of family
photography; the photographic production of the surrealist avant-garde
at the beginning of the XX century and its gender policies; the
photographic production in colonial context and the representations of
the colonized subject, in the framework of which Le Colonial Harem study
by Mallek Aloula, published in the 80s, is a historical landmark; war
photography and its relation to sexual politics, as discussed in 2009 by
Judith Butler in Frames of War: when is life grievable?; the
representation of sexual ambiguity by photographers ranging from the
pioneer Felix Nadar to the more contemporary Diane Arbus;
photoelicitation and photoessay as visual methods adapted to gender
studies – these are just some of the examples of recurring encounters
between photography and gender.
Possible topics include, but are not limited to:
- re-reading history and theory of photography from the perspective of
gender issues;
- optical devices and pre-photographic apparatus from a gender perspective;
- family photography, albums, collecting and gender issues;
- photography, gender, private and public space;
- photojournalism, collective memory and representations of gender;
- photography and feminist and post-colonial studies;
- photography and intersectional approach;
- police photography and gendered representations;
- photography as a technological and sensory device;
- photography and body representations;
- photographic methodologies and gender studies;
- photography, artistic vanguards, contemporary art and gender approaches;
- feminist studies, cultural productions and the photographic medium;
“Comunicação e Sociedade” [“Communication and Society”] is a double
blind, peer-reviewed journal (http://revistacomsoc.pt/).
Editorial rules:
Guidelines for electronic submission of manuscripts can be found, both
in Portuguese and English, at:
http://revistacomsoc.pt/index.php/comsoc/about/editorialPolicies#custom-2
<http://revistacomsoc.pt/index.php/comsoc/about/editorialPolicies#custom-2>
Original texts should be sent in Word format to (cecs /at/ ics.uminho.pt)
<mailto:(cecs /at/ ics.uminho.pt)>. Please copy, in “Cc”, the e-mail of the
coordinators of this special issue: Maria da Luz Correia
((maria.lf.correia /at/ uac.pt) <mailto:(maria.lf.correia /at/ uac.pt)>) and Carla
Cerqueira ((carlaprec3 /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(carlaprec3 /at/ gmail.com)>).
*Original texts can be submitted in Portuguese or in English. The
translation into the other language is the responsibility of the
author(s). However, the translation of the article can be provided at a
later stage, after confirmation of acceptance for publication of the
original manuscript.
In the SUBJECT, please write: Communication and Society Journal - Vol. 32.
Important dates:
Submission deadline: 31st July 2017 Notification of acceptance: 15th
September 2017 Publication date: December 2017
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