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[Commlist] CFP: Virtuous Viewing
Tue Aug 18 10:42:29 GMT 2020
Virtuous viewing
Over the past few months, numerous streaming services, media
conglomerates, film critics and journals, as well as academic
departments, have published lists of anti-racist films and television
shows to watch, or promoted Black Lives Matter watchlists and viewing
queues. This phenomenon has altered what it means to watch, particularly
in a time of quarantine, when cinematic spectatorship in the US largely
a small group and private affair. Likewise, by connecting spectatorship
to a political position, these lists present watching as an explicitly
politically-aware act. Watching films and television shows has always
been political. But because many of these lists also make educative
claims (to watch these films is to become informed), such lists assume
viewers are well-intentioned but ignorant. Of course, the curation of
moving images is not new and presents genuine opportunities for
awareness, consciousness raising, and political change. And yet, these
practices may also be cynical attempts to capitalize on a specific
moment of work from home quarantine and political uprisings on the
streets. Moreover, viewers themselves may attempt to signal their
political awareness through social media posts and various other public
markers in order to claim moral excellence.
This special issue of /Film Criticism/ seeks submissions on contemporary
viewing practices and issues of spectatorship specifically related to
the notion of *virtue*. Virtue has long been associated with moral
excellence, including chastity, industry, honesty, courage as well as
strength and power. The practice of virtuous viewing, then, is tied to
demonstration of moral character and moral superiority. Open to a
variety of methods and theoretical positions, this issue is looking for
work that interrogates the creation of these lists and subsequent
viewing practices. What are the implications of virtuous viewing for
film and media studies? What historical contingencies have coalesced to
make these practices possible? What are the potential effects of these
practices? What kinds of spectatorship are available now, in a time
marked by quarantine, political uprising, and structured by
internet-based digital media technologies?
Topics may include, but certainly are not limited to:
* Virtue as branding and marketing strategy
* Virtuous curation
* Virtue signaling through viewing practices
* Woke watching
* History months and themes
* Media literacy and curation
* Public libraries as virtuous and educative curators
* “Cancel culture” as virtuous viewing’s negative form
* Slacktivism
* Religious spectatorship
* Ethnographic and or personal accounts of partaking in virtuous
viewing and or list making
* Histories of issue-oriented viewing lists
* Video sharing platform playlists and algorithmic suggestions
Please send 500-word proposals with short bio to Stephen Groening
(groening /at/ uw.edu) <mailto:(groening /at/ uw.edu)>by November 1^st , 2020.
*STEPHEN GROENING*
Associate Professor
Director of Graduate Studies
Department of Cinema and Media Studies, University of Washington
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