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[Commlist] CFP Gender and labour in the Italian screen industries: Critical research approaches and methods
Thu Mar 17 15:25:09 GMT 2022
*Gender and labour in the Italian screen industries: Critical research
approaches and methods*
CALL FOR PAPERS
Special issue of Comunicazioni Sociali - Journal of Media, Performing
Arts and Cultural Studies (Scopus indexed; A-class rated ANVUR) edited
by Rosa Barotsi, Gloria Dagnino and Carla Mereu Keating
In the last twenty years, increasing scholarly attention has been
devoted to the screen industries as a workplace and as a site of
institutional and individual cultural and creative practice (e.g., Deuze
2007; Mayer, Banks and Caldwell 2009; Hesmondhalgh and Baker 2010).
Studies in this field have often centred on film, television and
audiovisual media production (e.g., Caldwell 2008; Barra, Bonini and
Splendore 2016; Comand and Venturini 2021), although forms of labour in
circulation, promotion and reception of media texts have also attracted
interest (e.g. Loist 2011; Grainge and Johnson 2015; Fanchi and Garofalo
2018; Treveri Gennari et al. 2020). Within these studies, a number of
scholars have interrogated and utilised gender as an analytic category
in order to expose and criticise unequal and divisive labour dynamics
(e.g., Foster 1997; Gaines, Vatsal and Dall’Asta 2013-; Bell 2021). The
gendered division of labour and the systematic exclusion of
female-identifying professionals in the screen industries persistently
emerge as global, transnational issues (e.g., Gledhill and Knight 2015;
Hole, Jelača, Kaplan and Petro 2016; Liddy 2020). In Italy, pioneering
studies on women’s labour in the audiovisual sector can be traced back
to the 1970s (Bellumori 1972; Carrano 1977), but it is only in recent
years that a gender perspective has been taken on more systematically,
focusing on directors (e.g., Scarparo and Luciano 2010, 2013, 2020;
Cantini 2013) as well as other above- and below-the-line professions
(e.g., Dall’Asta 2008; Cardone and Fanchi 2011; Cardone, Jandelli and
Tognolotti 2015; Buffoni 2018; Missero 2022).
This concerted academic attention continues to raise a number of
critical, theoretical and methodological, questions: how instrumental is
the category of gender in exposing power dynamics and labour relations
in the Italian past and present screen industries? How can we uphold
intersectional feminist, queer and decolonial perspectives of gender and
labour in meaningful ways? How do we redress long-established
heteronormative and binary approaches? Finally, how do we tackle
historical bias in archival practice and engage with the promises and
limitations of digital technologies?
This special journal issue aims to foreground a range of research
approaches and methods to document the intersection between gender and
labour from a diachronic or synchronic perspective. It welcomes a
variety of theoretical frameworks and applied case studies that identify
and engage (self-)critically with past and present understandings of
gendered specialisation and discrimination in the Italian screen
industries, also from comparative and/or transnational perspectives.
This issue concurrently serves as a platform for screen industry
scholars and practitioners to reflect critically on historical relations
of gender bias and power in the research process, calling them to
examine consciously and explicitly the assumptions that underpin their
approaches and methods and the nature and availability of their archives
and data resources. We are also interested in contributions from
educators and practitioners whose work integrates ethical principles in
the formulation of innovative research-led teaching and creative practice.
Topics may include, but are not limited to, the following areas of
investigation:
*Methodological challenges in gender-based studies of Italian screen
industries.
*Gendered labour and working conditions in the Italian screen industries.
*Screen labour historiography and historical revisionism.
*Screen labour and intersectional, transfeminist, decolonial and
disability studies.
*Critical inclusion studies and Italian screen industries.
*Questioning normative frameworks of employment in the Italian screen
industries (political, economic, legal, policy-based).
*Histories of hidden, forgotten and/or marginalised figures in Italian
screen labour.
*Gendered labour in Italian promotional screen industries.
*Ethics and aesthetics of representation, casting and performance.
*Archival research methods, experiences, challenges (politics of archiving).
*Datafication of screen research (materiality, typology, bias,
interpretation and politics of data).
*Digital Humanities and research on screen labour (mapping, immersive,
digitisation, online sources).
Submission details:
Please send your abstract and a 150 words biographical note by May 15,
2022 to:
(redazione.cs /at/ unicatt.it)<mailto:(redazione.cs /at/ unicatt.it)>
(roza.barotsi /at/ unicatt.it)<mailto:(roza.barotsi /at/ unicatt.it)>
(gloria.dagnino /at/ usi.ch)<mailto:(gloria.dagnino /at/ usi.ch)>
(c.mereukeating /at/ bristol.ac.uk)<mailto:(c.mereukeating /at/ bristol.ac.uk)>
Abstracts should be between 300 to 400 words of length (in English). All
submissions should include: 5 keywords, name of author(s), institutional
affiliation, contact details and a short bio for each author. Authors
will be notified of proposal acceptance by May 30, 2022.
If the proposal is accepted, the author(s) will be asked to submit the
full article, in English, by September 18, 2022. Please note that NO
article processing fee will be required.
Submission of a paper will be taken to imply that it is unpublished and
is not being considered for publication elsewhere.
Articles must not exceed 5’000/6’000-words (including references)
For more information:
http://comunicazionisociali.vitaepensiero.com/news-call-for-papers-cfp-gender-and-labour-in-the-italian-screen-industries-critical-research-approaches-and-methods-5801.html
Contributions will be submitted to a double-blind peer review process.
The issue number 1.2023 of Comunicazioni Sociali will be published in
April, 2023.
“Comunicazioni Sociali” is indexed in Scopus and it is an A-class rated
journal by ANVUR in: Cinema, photography and television (L-ART/06),
Performing arts (L-ART/05), and Sociology of culture and communication
(SPS/08).
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