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[Commlist] Alphaville Journal CFP reminder: Fostering Diversity On and Off Screen
Thu Sep 03 15:49:19 GMT 2020
*REMINDER – CFP: Fostering Diversity On and Off Screen*
Special issue - /Alphaville: Journal of Film and Screen Media/
*Deadline for abstracts: Monday 14 September 2020*
Members of the Australian Screen production Education and Research
Association (ASPERA) Research sub-committee invite submissions of full
length (6000 word) research articles and short (2000 word) teaching
focused articles for a special issue of /Alphaville/ that poses the
question: what further measures can give rise to increased diversity
both on screen and behind the camera?
In recent years, individuals and groups from inside and outside of
academia have called for greater diversity on screen, resulting in
campaigns such as #MeToo, #TimesUp, and # OscarsSoWhite. In particular,
the gender imbalance that exists on screen and behind the camera has
been a particular point of focus. 2015 figures from Australian national
funding body, Screen Australia, revealed a gender imbalance in
mainstream filmmaking, with women accounting for only 32% of producers,
23% of writers and 16% of directors. Later that same year, Screen
Australia announced their five-point, $5 million plan for Gender
Matters, a suite of initiatives aimed at addressing this imbalance
within the Australian screen industry. With comparable gender disparity
figures also evident outside of Australia, similar initiatives have been
implemented in other territories, such as the Swedish Film Institute’s
FiftyFifty by 2020 initiative (2012), the British Film Institute’s Three
Ticks initiative (2015) and the Irish Film Board’s suite of measures in
2017.
The issue of gender imbalance on/off screen has recently been explored
further by Screen Australia, with recent research by Caris Bizzaca
(2019) posing the question, ‘where does gender disparity in the
Australian screen industry start?’ Bizzaca’s research involved the
collection and analysis of data from four Australian film schools, which
found that there are significant gender discrepancies within specific
degree courses.
Other recent research has explored the gender imbalances of Australian
key creative teams (Verhoeven, 2016), the gendered nature of media
industries more broadly (see Media Industries volume 6, issue 1,
2019; Feminist Media Studies volume 18, issue 3, 2018) and the specifics
of diversity on screen in feature film form (see New York Film Academy,
2017; Verhoeven, 2018).
Further to the research cited above, the research sub-committee of the
Australian Screen Production Education & Research Association (ASPERA)
proposes a special issue of Alphaville that looks forward, posing the
question: what further measures can give rise to increased diversity
both on screen and behind the camera? To this end, we invite full length
articles (6000 words) that explore the challenges associated with
fostering diversity on and off screen, and that make suggestions for new
approaches in the screen production classroom, on set and in regards to
the screen industries more broadly. In addition to work addressing
gender imbalances, we welcome an exploration of intersectionality,
recognising the complex ways in which the effects of varying forms of
discrimination intersect, converge or overlap.
Subjects of research may include:
* Studies and/or evaluations of funding body initiatives aimed to
increase diversity
* Case studies from the screen industries – e.g- film productions
and/or screenplays which have demonstrated a commitment to increased
diversity on screen
* Gendered diversity on screen- a consideration of intersectional
factors such as ethnicity, disability, age or class
* Case studies from educational settings – how to improve diversity
on/off screen in student work
* Empirical studies of educational practices regarding screen diversity
* Practice-based approaches to pedagogies of diversity in/out of the
classroom
We also invite short articles that explore teaching methods for a
dossier on classroom practices designed to foster diversity (2000 words).
It is hoped that the special issue will present research that suggests a
way forward for practitioners, educators and members of the broader
screen industries from all over the globe.
Please note that both the full-length articles and the shorter articles
on teaching methods will be peer-reviewed.
In the first instance, please send *a 200-word abstract and a 100-word
biography to (rsc /at/ aspera.org.au) <mailto:(rsc /at/ aspera.org.au)> by Monday 14
September 2020*.
These abstracts will be reviewed by the editors, and responses will be
issued by December 2020. Drafts of full papers will be due in June 2021,
with amendments to follow. Publication of the Special Issue will occur
in late 2022.
No APCs required
________________________
/Alphaville: Journal of Film and Screen Media/
International, open access, peer reviewed
www.alphavillejournal.com <http://www.alphavillejournal.com/>
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