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[Commlist] MEDIAPOLIS Journal Dossier CFP: Media and Urban Automobility
Wed Apr 26 07:10:54 GMT 2023
MEDIAPOLIS Dossier CFP: Media and Urban Automobility
Edited by Cortland Rankin (Bowling Green State University)
https://www.mediapolisjournal.com
It is hard to overstate the impact of the automobile on cities (broadly
defined to include urban, suburban, and exurban areas). From enabling
new modes of moving through and inhabiting urban space to prompting the
reorganization of entire metropolitan regions to revolutionizing the
very perception of time and space, cars and other motor vehicles have
radically transformed the urban world. To best appreciate the magnitude
of these changes over a century in the making, it’s useful to understand
the automobile (here understood to include the passenger car as well as
other motor vehicles) not simply as a mode of transportation and
consumer product, but as the nexus of an assemblage of social, economic,
political, cultural, geographical, and technical systems. The term
“automobility” suggested by sociologist John Urry among others, provides
a useful conceptual framework for approaching the sprawling web of
interdependent actors, processes, and phenomena that supports and is in
turn supported by the automobile. Of chief concern in this dossier are
the roles media has played in reflecting and shaping the relationship
between automobility and urbanism. The functions of media in this
dynamic are many and as such the types of media available for
consideration will be left intentionally open, from representations of
cars and other motor vehicles, automotive infrastructure, or car
cultures, etc. in urban contexts in film, television, advertising, video
games, and other forms of visual culture to the incorporation and
instrumentalization of various media technologies in motor vehicles and
the various systems that support them. Contributions from a range of
disciplinary perspectives including film and media studies,
communication, art history, urban studies, urban planning, geography,
architecture, history, sociology, anthropology, and economics, among
others are welcome. Potential avenues of inquiry may include, but are
not limited to, the intersection of media and:
Urban and suburban car cultures/cultural practices of driving and car use
Automobility and the formation of individual/local/regional/national
identities
Automobility and urban planning/development
Urban automotive infrastructure (e.g., streets, highways, bridges,
tunnels, parking lots, gas stations, traffic control systems, road
signage, etc.)
The environmental impact of automobiles and automotive infrastructure
(e.g., land use, resource consumption, pollution, climate change, etc.)
The automobile as dwelling/mode of inhabiting urban space
Automobility and the navigation of urban space
Embodied experiences/phenomenology of driving
Automobility and race/class/gender in relation to questions of access,
inclusion, exclusion, inequality, privilege, power, etc.
The automotive industry and urbanism
Automobiles as media “platforms” (i.e., the car as host for a range of
media devices from radios to TVs and touch screens)
“Smart” car/driver interfaces and driverless car technologies
Automobility and labor (e.g., commuting, the circulation of goods, the
car as workplace, etc.)
Automobility and policing
Automobility and public safety (e.g., accidents, road deaths,
pedestrian/car confrontations, etc.)
The politics of automobility (i.e., how cities should be organized and
for whom)
The car and anti-urban ideologies and practices
Critiques of automobile-centric urbanism
Please submit an abstract of your proposed article (300 words) and a
short bio (100 words) to Cortland Rankin ((rankicw /at/ bgsu.edu)) by June 2,
2023. Authors will be informed of the selection by June 9. Full articles
(3,000-4,000 words) will be due by August 7, 2023 and will subsequently
go through an anonymous peer review process. The dossier is scheduled
for the September 2023 issue.
Mediapolis: A Journal of Cities and Culture is an interdisciplinary
online journal that publishes scholarship from a range of academic
fields addressing the complex and mutually constitutive relationship
between media and the city.
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