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[Commlist] Flow Special Issue CFP: "Streaming Wars and TV's Next Juncture"
Tue Jan 07 21:44:12 GMT 2020
Call for Papers:
Flow Volume 26 Special Issue: “Streaming Wars and Television’s Next
Juncture”
As the new decade dawns, Disney, Apple, WarnerMedia, and NBCUniversal
have launched (or will soon launch) their own streaming platforms. These
entrants prove once again that the ecology of television and digital
content is one that continuously shifts, raising the question: Is a
streaming war in full swing? With legacy media companies and major
technology companies entering the ring, has the streaming arena now
become too crowded? And how will consumers, amidst ever-multiplying,
well-funded platforms vying for their attention, alter and/or reinforce
their viewership and subscription consumer habits?
This special issue of Flow’s twenty-sixth volume, “Streaming Wars and
the Future of Television,” asks cultural and media scholars to consider
these and other questions related to the recent shift in streaming media
— all while remembering streaming technologies’ long and integral role
in post-network American television. From 2000, with the use of cameras
to live-stream the activities of the Big Brotherhouse on AOL, to the mid
2000s, when platforms began delivering content digitally to households,
and the early 2010s, when Netflix, Amazon Video, and others began
producing original content — over the past 20 years, the short history
of streaming has been made up of numerous evolutions. The entrance of
these new streaming platforms, then, might be better understood not as a
revolutionary break from one era to another but rather as yet another
(albeit monumental) progression.
Therefore, we invite submissions that grapple with this most recent
shift. Using industrial, historical, political, regulatory, economic,
cultural, national, and transcultural/international lenses, scholars
might consider: Is there something new and noteworthy about this
particular moment in streaming media, or does it echo previous business
models? In what ways do (or don’t) these newer platforms signal the
future of television? What is gained or lost as legacy media outlets
move into digital terrain? And in what ways can scholars across
television studies, media industries, platform studies, and related
fields collaborate and converse about this multi-billion dollar push
into a new industrial and technological era of television? Possible
topics include, but are by no means limited to:
*
Focused studies on specific platforms, their respective parent media
companies, and/or their distinct strategies on entering the
streaming market
*
Weekly episodic release vs. binge model
*
Narrative/representational possibilities borne from new streaming
production/distribution models
*
Reconceptualizing media conglomeration, mergers & acquisitions, and
integration studies
*
Use of particular IP or content from media libraries to leverage
access and finance
*
Implications for pre-existing niche, minor, and independent
streaming platforms
*
Changes in film distribution and exhibition
*
Changes in international media flows
*
Production studies of such issues as shifts in narrative
development, financial affordances, and marketability through A-list
talent
To be considered for this timely issue, please submit a completed short
essay of 1,200-1,500 words, along with at least three images (.png),
video, and/or new media files (GIFs, etc.), and a short bio, to
co-managing editors Rusty Hatchell and Selena Dickey at
(flowjournaleditors /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(floweditors /at/ gmail.com)>by Monday,
February 10, 2020. The Special Issue will be published at
flowjournal.org <http://www.flowjournal.org/>on Monday, March 2, 2020.
Please note: /Flow Journal/ does not charge authors to publish on the site.
*
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