[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[Commlist] cfp Synoptique - Call for Submissions "Animating LGBTQ+ Representations: Queering the Production of Movement"
Mon Apr 15 21:48:13 GMT 2019
Please find below a reminder for Submissions to /Synoptique- An Online
Journal of Film and Moving Images Studies/
/
/
French version in pdf.
Deadline for submission is *April 30, 2018*.
*Call for Submissions: “Animating LGBTQ+ Representations: Queering the
Production of Movement”*
*Special Issue of /Synoptique: An Online Journal of Film and Moving
Image Studies/*
At the heart of animation is movement, and the expression of movement is
negotiated differently across media. How then do LGBTQ+ communities
reappropriate the specificities of animation, comics, videogames, and
other forms of visual representations that rely on putting bodies into
motion? How does animation support the emergence of social and political
movements from within, between, and outside media production spaces?
Since 2010, studies of LGBTQ+ representation in animation have steadily
increased in number. From queer readings (Halberstram 2011), to media
histories (McLelland, Nagaike, Suganuma, Welker 2015), to queer media
makers (such as bisexual, non-binary creator Rebecca Sugar and other
queer animators like Noelle Stevenson and Chris Nee), animation
production has become a vital site for the study, performance, and
persistence of queer media practices. Although much conversation has
been devoted to queer readings of texts in transmedia movements, the
people, circuits, and institutions of queer animated media production
have attracted significantly less attention.
By focusing on the “politics of movement,” we intend to grasp the
convergence of 1) common techniques of animation in and across multiple
media platforms, 2) means of mobile image production both amateur and
industrial, and 3) social agendas in queer communities using the motion
of images to negotiate their representation and place in society. While
this issue will brush up against the various transmedia
(narrative-based, Jenkins, 2008), media mix (image-based, Steinberg,
2012) and cross-media (toy-based, Nogami, 2015) models and their
cultural geographies across the globe, our central aim here is to expand
the knowledge and visibility of LGBTQ+ sociopolitical projects evolving
conjointly with the creation and circulation of animated images.
Producing movement in, across, and outside of media extends the
synchronization of images to networks of commodities, territories, and
peoples. Although an important amount of scholarship tends to address
this question as the “queering of texts,” we seek another point of view
coming directly from the creation of moving images itself. Such
production practices are also imbricated in and respond to geo-political
and cultural contexts. How then does the movement in between frames,
vignettes, illustrations, and memes (to name a few examples) initiate
social action (be it just to produce pornography for marginalized
communities or to create conventions for amateur artists and publics to
meet)?
This issue of /Synoptique: An Online Journal of Film and Moving Image
Studies /will focus on queer media practices and the politics of
movement. When animating LGBTQ+ images, media creators are also
mobilizing queer practices, communities, and identities. Therefore, we
are particularly interested in analyses and testimonies that examine
sites of queer media production and their animation techniques,
strategies, and practices. We encourage contributions that examine the
interactions of animation within media related to animation, such as
comics and videogames, as forms of queer movement often overflow and
interact throughout multiple media platforms (Hemmann, 2015). We also
invite submissions of artwork either from queer-identifying artists and
practitioners, or pieces that explore queer movement, embodiment, and
existence. Interviews, manifestos, essays, and other forms of writing on
animated movement in queer media making are warmly welcome, as are
multimedia contributions.
Suggested topics include, but are not limited to:____
-The industrial or amateur structures of LGBTQ+ images production
-Movement in LGBTQ+ pornography and erotika
-Queer movement in comics, visual novels, videogames, etc.
-The strategies and places of queered images (“Queer” Media mix,
Marketing, Festivals, and Conventions)
-Animated media production of the Global South (such as Brazilian
Netflix show /Super Drags/)
-Distribution networks for LGBTQ+ animated series (TV, platforms, VOD)
-LGBTQ+ representations in animated media emerging from manga including
both more mainstream (Boy’s Love, Yuri) and subcultural (so-called
Bara or Gachimuchi) productions
-Local LGBTQ+ communities and their struggles expressed through moving
images
-Queer movement across comics and animation
-Decolonizing sexualities
-Cosplay as queer (re)animation
__ We use a broad interpretation of LGBTQ+ identity, including Lesbian,
Bisexual, Gay, Trans*, Queer/Questioning, Two-Spirit, Intersex, Agender,
Asexual, Pansexual, Genderqueer, Genderfluid, Non-binary, X-gender,
Genderfuck, etc.
Essays submitted for peer review should be approximately 5,500-7,500
words and must conform to the Chicago author-date style (17th ed.). All
images must be accompanied by photo credits and captions.____
We also warmly invite submissions to the review section, including
conference or exhibition reports, film festival reports, and interviews
related to the aforementioned topics. All non-peer review articles
should be a maximum of 2,500 words and include a bibliography following
Chicago author-date style (17th ed.).____
Multimedia works such as digital video, gifs, still images, or more
(surprise us!) are also welcome. Works under 8MB may by hosted directly
on the Synoptique site; anything larger must be uploaded to an external
site (Youtube, Vimeo, etc). Please contact the Synoptique Board for more
information on the procedures to submit artworks.
All submissions may be written in either French or English.
Please submit completed essays or reports to the Editorial Collective
((_editor.synoptique /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(editor.synoptique /at/ gmail.com)>_)
issue guest editors, Kevin J. Cooley ((_kevin.cooley /at/ ufl.edu)
<mailto:(kevin.cooley /at/ ufl.edu)>_), Edmond (Edo) Ernest dit Alban
((_ernestedo /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(ernestedo /at/ gmail.com)>_), and Jacqueline
Ristola ((_jacqueline.ristola /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(jacqueline.ristola /at/ gmail.com)>_), by April 30^st . We will send
notifications of acceptance by June 30^st .
/Synoptique: An Online Journal of Film and Moving Image Studies/
www.synoptique.ca <http://www.synoptique.ca/>
---------------
The COMMLIST
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier. Please use it responsibly and wisely.
--
To subscribe or unsubscribe, please visit http://commlist.org/
--
Before sending a posting request, please always read the guidelines at http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
URL: http://nicocarpentier.net
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]