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[ecrea] Cfp Literary Journalism as a Discipline - Brazilian Journalism Research
Fri Feb 23 08:01:53 GMT 2018
CFP
/Brazilian Journalism Research/, Vol. 14, N. 3
Literary Journalism as a Discipline
John S. Bak, Monica Martinez
The introduction to /Literary Journalism across the Globe/ concluded
with an open challenge to literary journalism scholars around the world:
“… [to] stop referring to literary journalism as a genre … or even as a
form … and [to] start calling it what it is: a discipline” (Bak and
Reynolds, 2011: 18). Response to that challenge has been overwhelming,
evidenced by the many monographs, collections and scholarly articles
that have since been published in various languages worldwide. And yet,
efforts in establishing literary journalism studies as an independent
discipline (that is, an internationally recognized field of study with
institutional backing and support from university administrators to
publishing houses, from individual scholars to learned societies, and
from commercial enterprises to governmental agencies) have been slow in
developing, and the reasons for this are several.
To be considered a discipline, literary journalism will need to continue
advancing along many fronts. To start with, adiscipline, of course,
needs historians to determine its pedigree and to establish its moments
of institutional crises, and literary journalism has certainly been
blessed with many of them from around the world: Norman Sims (2007) and
John C. Hartsock (2000) in the U.S.; Edvaldo Pereira Lima (1993) and
Monica Martinez (2016)in Brazil; Sonja Merljak Zdovc (2008) in Slovenia;
Myriam Boucharenc (2001) and Marie-Eve Thérenty (2007) in France;
Isabelle Meuret and Paul Aron (2012) in Belgium; Albert Chillón (1999)
in Spain;**Charles A. Laughlin (2002) in China, Isabel Soares in
Portugal (2011), to name but a few. These historians have established
the main periods of literary journalism’s development over the
centuries, which scholars have since been fleshing out. A discipline
also needs a corpus of primary and secondary texts on which to found
itself, and scholarship over the past decade or more has surely
increased the number and visibility of the literary journalistic texts
around the world. And yet, while recovering lost texts for the literary
journalism canon and arguing cases for new recruits has been invaluable
to the field, a discipline that has been idling in corpus building and
textual analysis, which is where literary journalism studies seems to be
today, is not entirely advancing. To move forward, a discipline also
needs its own theories and methodologies, which have heretofore been
borrowed mostly from the disciplines of journalism and literature.
Given this current state of affairs, this volume of /BJR/ seeks articles
that theorize literary journalism studies or explore methodologies that
will advance its scholarship. Literary journalism as a praxis has been
flourishing these past couple decades, and its scholarships needs to
keep apace. While some theoretical inquiry into literary journalism
aesthetics has already been conducted (Hartsock, 2015; Lima, 1993; Aare,
2016), and ad hoc research methodologies have frequently been imported
from other disciplines (e.g., framing theory and life history from
journalism/communication or deconstructionism and postcolonialism from
literature/Cultural Studies), literary journalism studies is faced with
the challenge to formulate its own theories and research methods, which
would allow it both to assert its own authority and autonomy and to lend
its epistemological resources to other disciplines that are faced with
resolving similar quan daries surrounding textual hybridity,
international specificities and historical subjectivity. For example,
the reading experience of literary journalism differs from that of
traditional journalism and of literature, yet we are repeatedly
borrowing theories from both of these fields to explain this
reader-literary journalistic text experience. Literary journalism
studies would surely benefit from new theories on how a reader of a /New
Yorker /article, who knows that the story is factual but who nonetheless
takes pleasure in the reading the text as if it were a short story,
processes information differently from those readings a story in the
/Folha de S.Paulo/ or a historical novel.
Possible submissions on the epistemologies, methodologies and praxes of
literary journalism studies that are linked directly to the greater
debate of disciplinary identity could include: the theorization of
literary journalism’s aesthetics (text-, author-, reader- and
environment-based theories); a bibliographic assessment of the current
state of research in international literary journalism studies (in
including a section on future research topics); an examination of other
disciplinary theories and methods being imported into literary
journalism’s analytical framework; the application of inter-, pluri- and
transdisciplinarity to literary journalism studies around the world
(that is, scholarship of literary journalism studies will likely come
from other disciplines, such as history, sociology, media studies,
communication studies, etc., thus it might be considered an emerging
post-academic science); the exploration of litera ry journalism’s
theories and methodologies that could be taken up by other disciplines;
etc. The specific questions that the volume seeks answers to include
episthemological and methodological but also sociological and cultural
issues in relation to the possible disciplinarization of literary
journalism.
This volume’s gambit is that, just as the praxis of literary journalism
has been carving out its niche in the world of journalism, the study of
literary journalism will need to branch out and explore new frontiers
within the academy. Like any adolescent whose passage into adulthood
inevitably draws upon and, at times, contests the experiences and
knowledge of its parents, literary journalism studies will need to weigh
the theories and methodologies of its parent disciplines – literature
and journalism – against its own epistemological wants and needs and, in
so doing, establish its own means to addressing the many questions and
quandaries that preoccupy it, as much today as tomorrow. While such
critical thinking may elicit contrastive responsesfrom both sides of the
literary journalistic spectrum, the editors welcome the debate, firmly
believing that nothing new emerges without dialogue, from both outside
and inside the discipline. After all, literary and journalistic studies
are not haunted by their many, at times antagonistic, schools of
critical thought. On the contrary, both are made richer by them. This
volume thus hopes that any debate that it generates will ultimately
serve literary journalism studies in establishing itself as a discipline
unique to itself, but always open and willing to foster a dialogue with
other fields of knowledge.
Articles, from 40,000 to 55,000 characters with spaces, APA Style, must
be submitted by June 1st, 2018.
As Brazilian Journalism Research publishes two versions of each issue
(in Portuguese/Spanish and in English), the authors of the articles
accepted in Spanish or Portuguese should provide the English
translation. In the same way, the authors of texts accepted in English
should send a version in Portuguese or Spanish.
The articles should be sent exclusively through the SEER/OJS electronic
system available on the website of the journal: http://bjr.sbpjor.org.br
If in doubt, please, send an email to (bjr /at/ gmail.com).
Guidelines for authors:
http://bjr.sbpjor.org.br/bjr/aboutsubmissions#authorGuidelines
Deadline for article submission: June 1st, 2018
Notification of acceptance: August 15th, 2018
Deadline for submission of the final version in English and
Portuguese/Spanish with revision and additional information suggested by
the editors: September 30, 2018
Published: December 30th, 2018
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