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[Commlist] CFC: Queer Visibility, Online Discourse and Political Change
Sun Jan 27 23:37:30 GMT 2019
Call for Chapters: Queer Visibility, Online Discourse and Political
Change: From /RuPaul’s Drag Race/ to Drag in the Global Digital Public
Sphere
On both popular and academic levels, interest in drag culture has
exploded since the reality-competition television series /RuPaul’s Drag
Race/ first aired in 2009 on Logo TV in the US. With the migration of
the series to VH1 and global availability through streaming services
such as Netflix, drag has become even more ensconced in mainstream
popular culture, thus moving even further from earlier understandings of
drag as a subculture of queer protest and/or limited to the gay club
environment. For the most part, however, recent academic work on drag
has focused on /RuPaul’s Drag Race/ itself for its textual and
production qualities, contestant representation of LGBTQ identities, and
physical viewers or fan communities, leaving unaddressed the
implications of how /RuPaul’s Drag Race/ has generated interest and
participation in a particular drag perspective within the global digital
public sphere. Concern for drag in a global digital public sphere should
also consider the ways in which online discourse is shaping prospects of
visibility and political change for LGBTQ individuals and communities
around the world, particularly in increasingly isolated and politically
regressive areas of the world.
Following the publication and success of /RuPaul’s Drag Race and the
Shifting Visibility of Drag Culture: The Boundaries of Reality TV/
(Palgrave Macmillan, 2017), its editors invite chapter proposals for a
new, edited volume concerned with the general themes of queer
visibility, online discourse, emerging digital technologies, and
political change as they relate to drag culture. Proposed chapter topics
may consider, but are certainly not limited to, the following:
- Theorizing a global digital public sphere in relation to drag culture
- Drag and public discourse as they apply to online/digital spheres
- Political discourse and change within drag culture’s online/digital
spheres
- The digital public sphere and self-promotional culture
- Authorized or unauthorized online extensions of RuPaul’s Drag Race
- YouTube drag stars, (micro) performers and online platforms
- The role of technology in creating a drag global digital public sphere
- Generational participation patterns in global digital drag culture
- Issues of labor surrounding online drag personalities
- Establishing a drag brand in the global digital public sphere
- What drag culture can teach us about emerging digital environments
- Relations and tensions between online and offline drag cultures
- Audience and fan roles in creating and shaping online drag
personalities and cultures
- Emerging media’s roles in altering traditional drag labor,
expectations and rewards
- Case studies situated at the intersection of drag culture and the
global digital sphere
In particular, we seek proposals from outside North America and Western
Europe to contribute to a truly multi-perspectival understanding of drag
in a global digital public sphere. We also encourage proposals from
newly-established scholars.
Please email chapter proposals of up to 500 words in length, as well as
brief author biographical information, to the volume editors at
(nbrennan /at/ fairfield.edu) <mailto:(nbrennan /at/ fairfield.edu)> and
(dgudelunas /at/ ut.edu) <mailto:(dgudelunas /at/ ut.edu)> by 15 March 2019. Decisions
on proposals will be made and communicated to authors around 1 April
2019. Note that multiple academic publishers have already expressed
interest in the volume.
***
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