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[Commlist] ICA Preconference | Going Global before Satellite and Internet
Wed Nov 15 19:41:38 GMT 2023
Going Global before Satellite and Internet:
Electronic Media Production, Distribution, and Consumption, 1920s-1980s
Preconference sponsored by the Communication History and Global
Communication and Social Change Divisions of the International
Communication Association
Australian Centre for Public History, University of Technology, Sydney
Tuesday, 18 June 2024 8:00-17:00
Organizers
Joy Hayes, Associate Professor, Communication Studies, University of
Iowa (primary) David Goodman, Professor, History, University of Melbourne
Bridget Griffen-Foley, Professor, Media, Communications, Creative Arts,
Language and Literature, Macquarie University
Susan Smulyan, Professor, American Studies, Brown University
Derek W. Vaillant, Professor, Communication & Media, University of Michigan
Description
This preconference explores the transnational circulation of broadcast
and electronic media between the 1920s-1980s. Presentations investigate
industrial infrastructures influencing media flows before satellite and
Internet, as well as the formal and informal practices of distribution
and consumption shaping audience experiences.Transnational media
histories focusing on the Global South (Asia, Africa, Latin America) and
Australasia are of particular interest.
We invite proposals that address topics such as:
• Transnational circulation and adaptation of radio program
recordings, scripts and formats in the 1930s-1970s
• Formal and informal distribution of foreign television programs
and their consumption in the 1960s-1980s
• Technological, cultural and industrial infrastructures and
global media flows before satellite and Internet
• The role played by nation states, global institutions and NGOs
in the transnational circulation of broadcast programming (for example,
development programs)
• Studies of transnational media audiences undertaken by
governmental and non- governmental agencies
• Insights from the pre-satellite and pre-Internet era for
contemporary debates over media and globalization
Submission Process and Format
We seek traditional papers but also are interested in a range of
non-traditional formats including (but not limited to)lightning talks,
works in progress, and ideas for roundtable discussions. If you are
interested in attending but won’t be in Australia, please be in touch
with suggestions on joining. We plan an early morning session for Asia
and the Americas and a late afternoon session for Europe, Africa, and
the Middle East. Participants might also want to submit pre- recorded
contributions.
Abstracts of 350 words (maximum) should be submitted to:
(goingglobal.precon /at/ gmail.com) no later than January 18, 2024. Please
include author names, affiliations, contact information of the
submitter, and a brief sentence on how the submission addresses the CFP.
Please indicate if you would like to participate in person or remotely;
also note the presentation format you would like to use. We welcome
submissions from early career scholars and graduate students.
Timeline
Deadline for abstract submission: 18 January 2024 Acceptance
notifications: 22 February 2024
Deadline for registration: 22 March 2024
Preconference: 18 June 2024
Please send questions to: (goingglobal.precon /at/ gmail.com) Rationale
We seek research that brings new geographical, cultural, political, and
theoretical perspectives to bear on thecontinuing “transnational turn”
in broadcasting and electronic media history. Most early scholarship
approached broadcasting narrowly as a tool of international politics and
propaganda reifying “the national” and the “national system” in the
process. Only in the last 10 years or so have scholars begun to move
beyond the propaganda framework to examine transnational broadcasting
within a broader industrial, organizational, and cultural framework.
Current research explores what Michele Hilmes (2012) identifies as the
dialectic between the national and transnational impulses of
broadcasting as a multi-locational, reflexive, cultural practice.
Scholars have further investigated the soundscapes created by global
broadcasting and electronic media, while paying particular attentionto
the cultural and political implications of transnational programming and
listening practices. Current scholarship demonstrates the importance of
taking an historical perspective on problems animating the field of
global media studies – such as asymmetries of cultural production and
circulation, the interaction of local and global frames of meaning,
power, and questions surrounding the agency of transnational
audiences/users and consumer publics.
Transnational, comparative, global, and de-Westernized histories of
media and communication technologies, regimes, developers, and audiences
offer fresh perspectives on scholarly and public conversations about
media in everyday life, power, resistance, and processes and prospects
for social and cultural change. The Going Global preconference seeks
scholarship that explores historical approaches for global media studies
and diversifies and decenters (largely U.S- and European-focused)
debates with research and case studies from the Global South,
Australasia and other contexts.
Selected Readings
Badenoch, Alexander, Andreas Fickers, and Christian Henrich-Franke. Airy
Curtains in the European Ether: Broadcasting and the Cold War. Nomos, 2013.
Chalaby, Jean K. "The making of an entertainment revolution: How the TV
format trade became a global industry." European Journal of
Communication 26, no. 4 (2011): 293-309.
Ehrick, Christine. Radio and the Gendered Soundscape: Women and
Broadcasting in Argentina and Uruguay, 1930-1950. Cambridge University
Press, 2015.
Föllmer, Golo, and Alexander Badenoch. Transnationalizing radio
research: New approaches to an old medium. transcript Verlag, 2018.
Goodman, David, and Susan Smulyan. "Portia Faces the World: Re-Writing
and Re-Voicing American Radio for anInternational Market." In Radio's
New Wave, 163-179. Routledge, 2013.
Herman, Edward S., and Robert McChesney. "The Rise of the Global Media."
In Planet TV a Global Television Reader, edited by Lisa Parks and Shanti
Kumar, 21-37. New York University Press, 2003.
Hilmes, Michele. Network nations: A transnational history of British and
American broadcasting.
Routledge, 2012.
Punathambekar, Aswin. From Bombay to Bollywood: The Making of a Global
Media Industry.
New York University Press, 2013.
Straubhaar, Joseph D. "Beyond media imperialism: Assymetrical
interdependence and cultural proximity." Critical Studies in media
communication 8, no. 1 (1991): 39-59.
Vaillant, Derek. Across the Waves : How the United States and France
Shaped the International Age of Radio. University of Illinois Press, 2017.
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