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[Commlist] CFP: Podcasting's Listening Publics
Thu Apr 16 11:37:00 GMT 2020
May I draw your attention to the following call for papers:
http://blogs.brighton.ac.uk/podcastpublics/
CfP: Podcasting’s Listening Publics – Participations: Journal of
Audience and Reception Studies
<http://blogs.brighton.ac.uk/podcastpublics/2020/04/14/cfp-podcastings-listening-publics-participations-journal-of-audience-and-reception-studies/>
*Co-editors*: Dario Llinares (Brighton), Alyn Euritt (Leipzig), Anne
Korfmacher (Köln)
“Listening is essential to the engagement with most of our media, albeit
that the act of listening which is embedded in the word ‘audience’ is
rarely acknowledged. It is a no less curious absence in theories of the
public sphere, where the objective of political agency is often
characterized as being to find a voice – which surely implies finding a
public that will listen, and that has a will to listen” (Lacey viii).
As podcasting moves through its adolescence, a period of flux in which
reformations of the technological and industrial organisation are having
fundamental effects on the next phase of its evolution, the ways in
which it encourages listening and reception practices are also
undergoing fundamental development. The nature of this development
depends on the communities, listening publics, and audiences the
podcasts serve and/or participate in. As Spinelli and Dann have noted
about podcasting, it always implies a relationship between creators and
listeners but “while individual listening might be the moment in which a
podcast ‘happens’ in some sense, it is possible, and indeed necessary,
to consider larger formations of podcast /audiences/” (13). For Spinelli
and Dann, podcast audiences are “much more ‘knowable’ than the radio
audience, and the interaction (particularly in fandom) [is] more
intense” (13-14). Who are these developing and changing “knowable”
podcast audiences and how do they interact with podcasting? What do they
listen to, how do they listen and why? Are audiences really knowable in
the way Dann and Spinelli suggest and what might this tell us about
audio communication practices in the digital age?
In order to understand the complexity, diversity and listening
engagements of podcasting’s audiences, this themed section aims to
expand the interdisciplinary range of contemporary podcasting studies by
including work in literary studies, fan studies, gender studies and
disability studies, as well as submissions that critically engage with
race. We also explicitly encourage research on podcasts outside the US
and Britain.
Possible topics include, but are not limited to:
– Podcast reception and connectivity in times of crisis
– How podcast listeners find new content, including the
development of taste cultures, content aggregation networks, and
platform-specific algorithmic recommendations
– Podcast participation and “prosumer” medial engagement (cf.
Alvin Toffler, /The Third Wave/)
– The development of genres, forms, and narrative practices
within podcasting that encourage specific types of listening practices
and audiences
– Podcast fans and fan podcasts, podcasting and fandom audiences
– Podcasts within niche culture, podcasting and marginalisation
– Podcasts and community-building practices
– Communal vs. private, on-demand listening
– The rise of right-wing politics podcasts and their listenership
– The role of voice (both politically and aesthetically) in
podcasting reception
– How podcasters imagine their listenership and cater their
content to specific listening publics
– Marketing discourses of attention and engagement
– Cultural values associated with (podcast) listening
Please submit a 300-word abstract and short author bio in an email with
the subject “Participations Themed Section Podcasting Publics_Euritt,
Korfmacher, Llinares” to (alyn.euritt /at/ fulbrightmail.org). For more
information about /Participations/ as well as submission guidelines,
visit their website at www.participations.org
<http://www.participations.org/>. Unfortunately, we are not in a
position to provide extensive copy editing services. If you are in need
of such services, please arrange for them before submission of your draft.
**
*Deadlines:*
Abstracts Due: June 30th, 2020
Decisions to Authors: July 10th, 2020
Full Submissions: September 30th, 2020
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