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[ecrea] CFP: Special issue of Film Criticism on film & merchandise
Mon Dec 18 17:02:37 GMT 2017
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/Film Criticism/ Special Issue on film & merchandise Call For Papers
(November 2018)
Guest editors: Dr. Elizabeth Affuso (Pitzer College) and Dr. Avi Santo
(Old Dominion University)
Despite Jane Gaines’ (1989) recognition that the cinema screen and the
department store display window have long participated in providing
audiences with spectacles of consumption that steered shoppers toward
one another’s venues, there is surprisingly little work that critically
interrogates film-related merchandise.Only recently have scholars
started to take this area of study seriously. For example, media
industry scholars have begun to pay attention to the creative, legal,
and managerial contestations among licensors, manufacturers, and
retailers, contending that merchandise is not simply an afterthought of
media production, distribution, acquisition, and circulation, but also
an area where industry lore about differentiated franchises and
consumers are affirmed and challenged.Others contend that the meanings
merchandise accrue are constituted through their use as much as by how
they are positioned for consumers. On the fan studies front, scholars
have become interested in object-oriented fandom as well as
‘fan-trepreneurs’ who sell ‘fan-made merchandise’ through crafting and
customization sites like Etsy. These works have explored the
commoditization of fandom, but they have also sought to understand what
fan communities ‘do’ with merchandise and how fan-based economies
operate. There has also been a tendency to explore how merchandise
interpellates particular gendered and age-based identities, with fashion
and toy-based merchandise receiving the bulk of attention, but
scholarship on the intersections of merchandise with race, sexuality,
and religion remains scarce as does work investigating the ways
film-inspired products have entered into daily routines as household
items and other lifestyle categories.
For this special issue of/ Film Criticism,/ we are seeking essays that
take a variety of approaches to the intersections of film, television,
and merchandise that open up new avenues of inquiry to studying the topic.
Possible topics include (but are not limited to):
-Industrial, consumer and fan sense-making practices when it comes to
merchandise (i.e., their imagined appeal to various constituencies,
their “authenticity”)
-Films about merchandise and/or product integration within films (/The
LEGO Movie/, /Toy Story/, /The Devil Wears Prada/)
-When manufacturers become entertainment companies (Hasbro, Mattel,
Sketchers)
-Industry lore, trade rituals, and their impact on merchandising
-Film merchandise beyond toys and fashion (including everyday household
and luxury items)
-Merchandising beyond the franchise/tentpole/blockbusters
-Branded educational, nutrition, health and hygiene merchandise (or the
use of branded merchandise within schools, healthcare, and other service
industries)
-Merchandise and transmedia storytelling
-Packaging and product design
-Race and merchandise (merchandise featuring diverse racial groups or
failing to do so; merchandise marketed to diverse racial groups;
merchandise used by diverse consumer and fan groups)
-Merchandise beyond child markets(including adult merchandise)
-Merchandise and the troubling of gender binaries
-Celebrity and merchandise (or celebrity and lifestyle)
-DIY merchandise and the logics of customization/maker cultures (as well
as anxieties over 3D printers and other DIY technologies)
-Merchandise and performative consumption (or interactive consumption)
-Merchandise and (commoditized) self-expression/group affiliation
-Fan-made merchandise
-Ethnographies of merchandise usage among fans or different consumer groups
-Fan consumer-activism
-Promotional giveaways and premiums
Essays should be a maximum of 7000 words including notes and references
and use Chicago Manual of Style, 16th edition
(http://www.chicagomanualofstyle.org/tools_citationguide.html). Please
submit essays electronically as a Word document file to (asanto /at/ odu.edu)
<mailto:(asanto /at/ odu.edu)>. Submissions should also include a cover page
with: (a) all authors’ names, academic affiliations, and e-mail
addresses; (b) author biography, no more than 70 words in length; and
(c) an abstract of 150 words or fewer. Drafts should be submitted for
review by May 1, 2018.You will receive acknowledgment of your submission
within ten days. Works accepted for this special issue will be returned
to contributors with reviewer feedback by July 1 and revised drafts will
be due on September 1 for a November 2018 publication date.
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