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[ecrea] CFP Gender, Migration and the Media
Thu May 03 22:18:34 GMT 2018
FEMINIST MEDIA STUDIES
Commentary and Criticism: Call for Papers
*18.6 Gender, Migration, and the Media*
Contemporary Western mediascapes are overflowing with contradictory
images of movement across borders. While goods and capital are cast as
successfully and often innocently mobile in a world shaped by the
triumphant discourse of globalization, human mass movement seems to
encounter ever-increasing obstacles, from legal constraints to military
prevention. In the context of what has become known as the recent
“refugee crisis”, human migration fostered by warfare and socio-economic
unbalances has become increasingly associated with powerlessness (a
condition in which moving appears to be the only choice for survival)
rather than with individual agency, which is regarded as the organizing
principle for middle- and upper-class Western citizens relocating abroad.
While media coverage of “irregular crossings” in the Mediterranean has
reached a fever pitch in Europe after the Arab Uprisings and since the
outbreak of the Syrian civil war, the complex gendering of this mediatic
narration has remained largely overlooked. In the contexts of
generalized violence that migrants escape (and live through while
migrating), women are typically subject to specific further abuse that
is often structural and programmatic, and that tends to go
underreported. On the other hand, Western news coverage is more likely
to represent female (rather than male) refugees and migrants as hapless
victims of a violence deemed endemic to their geographic, cultural,
religious, and ethnic “origins”, thus fuelling racist political
discourses on the “West and the rest”. As news coverage increasingly
intersects literary and artistic production, mediatic (and mediated)
discourses on migration thus appear more and more inescapably shaped by
gender, both with regard to the authors/artists’ own gendered identities
and in terms of their discursive choices in representing gendered
experiences of border-crossing.
Who gains access to the means of cultural production? Who gets to tell
their own stories or embarks on representing collective experiences? And
how do the unequal relations of cultural production inform the Western
casting of migrants as “victims” versus “willed individuals”, or “good”
versus “dangerous” subjects? The patterns and dynamics of media and
artistic production seen through the lenses of gender and race (as well
as ethnicity and class) are crucial to a critical understanding of the
contemporary Western discourse on migration. With this gender and
migration-focused “Commentary and Criticism” issue, we hope to gather
original contributions that tackle these important questions by looking
for women’s voices, exploring how (and if) they are amplified, and who,
in this case, hears them.
Contributions from a broad range of disciplines and theoretical
approaches are encouraged, including those challenging the conventional
borders among research fields and promoting dynamic interchange between
critical reflection and creativity. Though we have privileged Europe and
the Mediterranean in this narrative, we also welcome articles
considering gender, media, and migration from other geographic spaces,
comparative or otherwise. We are particularly interested in submissions
from scholars beyond North America and the UK.
Submissions may address topics such as:
* Gender and migration in the media
* Gender and political/cultural citizenship
* The gendering of asylum seekers in Western immigration policies
* Gender in artistic and/or literary discourses on migration
* “Subjects” and “objects” in storytelling by or about women migrants
* Intra-European media coverage on migration
* Social media and refugee narratives
* Gendered migration routes
The “Commentary and Criticism” section of /Feminist Media Studies/ aims
to publish brief (~1000 words), timely responses to current issues in
feminist media culture, for an international readership. Submissions may
pose a provocation, describe work in progress, or propose areas for
future study. We encourage all submissions to strategically mobilize
critique to also offer a productive contribution to both feminist
politics and media studies. Submissions must go beyond mere description
in order to be considered for publication in “Commentary and Criticism”.
Please submit contributions by *18 June 2018*, via email to both Mara
Mattoscio ((mara.mattoscio /at/ gmail.com)) and Megan C. MacDonald
((mgn.macdonald /at/ gmail.com)). Questions and expressions of interest can
also be addressed to Drs. Mattoscio and MacDonald in advance of the
deadline. Please note that submissions for “Commentary and Criticism”
will not be correctly processed if submitted through the main /Feminist
Media Studies/ site.
Submissions should follow the Feminist Media Studies style guide, which
can be found at the following link:
https://www.tandfonline.com/action/authorSubmission?journalCode=rfms&page=instructions
DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSIONS: 18 June, 2018
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