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[ecrea] CFP: Mobile Media beyond Mobile Phones
Mon Jan 08 22:09:10 GMT 2018
*Call for papers for a special section of /Mobile Media & Communication/
titled “Mobile Media Beyond Mobile Phones”, to be published in volume
7:3, 2019 (http://mmc.sagepub.com)*
Guest Editors
Jordan Frith, PhD, Associate Professor, University of North Texas, USA,
(frithjh /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(frithjh /at/ gmail.com)>
Didem Özkul, PhD, Lecturer, UCL Knowledge Lab, Department of Culture,
Communications and Media, University College London, UK.
(d.ozkul /at/ ucl.ac.uk) <mailto:(d.ozkul /at/ ucl.ac.uk)>
Overview
Smartphones have dominated the research in the field of Mobile
Communication Studies (MCS), and for good reason. Smartphones have
become possibly the dominant form of communication media, and have been
widely adopted in many parts of the world. However, this special section
of /Mobile Media & Communication /seeks to further broaden the field’s
research to examine other types of mobile communication, whether
historical, contemporary, or futuristic. Consequently, we are calling
for articles examining the theme of this special section: Mobile Media
beyond Mobile Phones. The goal of this special section is to expand the
focus of the field through innovative research on non-smartphone forms
of mobile technologies.
Obviously, some research on non-mobile phone forms of mobile
technologies exist. For example, researchers have studied the spatial
and social impacts of mobile auditory media such as the Walkman and the
iPod (Bull, 2001, 2007). Researchers have also examined how
infrastructures of mobile communication shape practices of mobility,
with studies examining how cell phone towers are embedded in the
environment (Horst, 2013). Other research has looked at historical forms
of mobile media, including the codex book and the kaleidoscope (Farman,
2015b). In addition, some researchers have examined how infrastructural
technologies like RFID and Bluetooth Beacons have shaped mobile
communication by bringing an increasing number of nonhuman actors into
the equation (Frith, 2015; Rosol, 2010). However, despite the research
that does exist, the field of MCS has the potential to incorporate far
more actors—both human and nonhuman—into the broader scope of MCS.
The special section will ideally publish a fairly eclectic collection of
articles united by the main theme: mobile communication involves more
than mobile phones. Consequently, the submitted articles can come from
various theoretical and methodological perspectives. In addition, the
special section will accept submissions that focus on
smartphone-adjacent topics as long as the focus is not specifically on
people’s interactions with smartphones as mobile interfaces. For
example, the infrastructure that enables mobile communication (cell
towers, GPS, etc.), newer forms of smartphone infrastructure (Beacons,
NFC), or the standards that shape smartphone development are all viable
topics for this section.
Possible topics, including but not limited to
·The Internet of Things broadly defined
·Historical forms of mobile communication, including but not limited to
oBooks as mobile media
oAncient forms of mobile media
oMobile auditory media
oBarcodes
oEarlier mobile gaming technologies (Gameboy, etc.)
·Mobile phone infrastructure (GPS, cell tower, etc.)
·Wearable technologies such as the Apple Watch, Fitbit, etc.
·Broader mobile communication infrastructure, including but not limited to
oRFID
oNear-Field Communication
oBLE Beacons
oQR Codes
·Robotics as mobile communication
·“Generations” of mobile networks—shift to 5G
·Mobile phone standards as vibrant actors
·The role of mobile communication in artificial intelligence
Journal Review Process and Submission Guidelines
For guidelines on preparation of manuscripts and criteria for
acceptance, please follow Mobile Media & Communication Submission
Guidelines
(https://uk.sagepub.com/en-gb/eur/journal/mobile-mediacommunication#submission-guidelines).
Please submit an abstract of 700-800 words that clearly states the main
argument and evidence of the paper and the primary literatures it is
building upon. The abstract should also clearly articulate the
submission’s contribution to mobile methods. For empirical studies still
in progress, please outline the current state and the timeline. Also
include the names, titles, and contact information for 2-3 suggested
reviewers. Abstracts are due 15 March, 2018 to (frithjh /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(frithjh /at/ gmail.com)>(with “Mobile Methods MMC Special Issue” in
the subject line), and should be accompanied by an abbreviated biography
(approx. 200-300 words).
Positively reviewed abstracts (notification by 15 April, 2018) will be
invited to submit full articles by 1 Oct, 2018, through
http://mmc.sagepub.com. These full articles will be peer-reviewed by two
to three reviewers and considered for acceptance. The special section
will be published in Volume 7, Issue 3 of /Mobile Media & Communication.
/Please note that manuscripts must conform to the guidelines for /Mobile
Media & Communication./ Final papers should be no longer than 7,000
words, including abstract, references, figures and tables. In case of
further questions, please contact the guest editors.
Timeline
CfP published: 8 Jan 2018
Extended abstracts due: 15 March, 2018
Notification: 15 April, 2018
Full submission: 1 Oct, 2018
Final version: 15 March 2019
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