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[Commlist] Call for Chapters: Power, Platforms, and Publics: Reconfiguring Distribution in Indian Television
Sun Feb 08 19:41:59 GMT 2026
Call for Chapters
Book Title: Power, Platforms, and Publics: Reconfiguring Distribution in
Indian Television
Editor: Dr. Sushmita Pandit (Assistant Professor, St. Xavier’s University)
Overview
The objective of this volume is to posit distribution as a fundamental
category for understanding power and publics in Indian television.
Distribution is gradually emerging as a pivotal yet under-theorized
location of power in contemporary Indian television. In the last few
years, the aspects of production, representation, genres and audience in
relation to Indian television have received ample scholarly attention.
However, the issues related to how television content is circulated
through cable, satellite, DTH, and OTT platforms, navigating regulatory,
policy decisions and infrastructural factors have received limited
academic consideration. This edited volume seeks to position
distribution as the focal point of analysis. It considers the category
of distribution not merely as a neutral, spontaneous organizing or
technical practice, but as an active, contested socio-technical system
that shapes visibility, access, labour, governance, and monetization.
This collection aims to highlight the Indian television scenario as a
case in point to connect with the ongoing global issues and debates
around streaming networks, platformization, portalization, forms of
algorithmic distribution, and the infrastructural turn in television
studies. Such an engagement can connect to critical and theoretical
debates to forge novel ways of seeing and narrating these changes. It is
fruitful to consider distribution as a critical category within the
Indian context, particularly because Indian media ecology offers a
unique site with public broadcasting practices, uneven infrastructure,
cultural-linguistic diversity, and policy-related uncertainty amid the
swift expansion of platforms. Drawing on both emerging fields of study
and established theoretical frameworks, this edited collection aims to
connect platform studies, policy research, a political economy approach,
and techno-cultural analysis, addressing the central question: how can
distribution be employed as a central analytical lens for understanding
contemporary Indian television and its transformations in relation to
markets, culture, technology, governance, and power in India.
The editor is currently in advanced stages of discussions with several
reputed academic publishers regarding the publication of this edited volume.
Call for Contributions
Original chapter submissions are invited that critically engage with the
politics and practices of distribution in Indian television.
Contributions should engage deeply on distribution as a site of debate,
power, and cultural mediation. We welcome interdisciplinary approaches
that combine theoretical innovation with empirical depth, and encourage
submissions that explore historical, contemporary, or speculative
dimensions of television distribution in India.
Chapters may be theoretical or empirical (5,000–7,000 words) and should
offer clear scholarly contributions to media and communication studies,
television studies, platform studies, cultural studies, or policy
research. Please note that there are no publication fees or charges to
authors for inclusion in this edited volume.
Themes and Topics
Chapter proposals are welcome on, but not limited to, the following themes:
• The historical evolution of television distribution practices in
India—from terrestrial broadcasting to cable, satellite, DTH, and OTT
platforms.
• Digitalization, platformization, and the reconfiguration of legacy
distribution models.
• Infrastructures of access and the production of inequality across
urban/rural, class, caste, linguistic, and regional divides.
• Platformization, algorithmic circulation, and the political economy of
OTT services.
• The circulation of regional and linguistic content in digital
distribution ecosystems.
• Regulatory frameworks, policy debates, and the governance of
distribution (e.g., content moderation, data governance, platform
liability).
• The experiential aspects of distribution (e.g., subscription sharing,
piracy, affordances, platform switching).
• Market concentration, ownership patterns, and the political economy of
distribution networks.
• Emerging issues related to distribution: AI, telecom-media
convergence, infrastructural justice, and democratic media access.
• Broader theoretical and methodological approaches to studying
distribution as cultural and political power.
Submission Process
Kindly submit an abstract of 300–500 words along with a brief author bio
(150 words) detailing your academic background and expertise to
manuscriptsub2026 [at] gmail.com <http://gmail.com>.
Abstracts should clearly state the chapter’s objectives, methodological
approach, and contribution to the field. We encourage proposals from
scholars across disciplines, including (but not limited to): media
studies, film studies, communication, political science, sociology,
cultural studies, science and technology studies (STS), philosophy,
posthumanities, legal studies, and digital humanities.
Deadlines
Abstract Submission Deadline: Tuesday, 31 March 2026
Notification of Acceptance: Thursday, 30 April 2026
Full Chapter Submission Deadline: Friday, 31 July 2026
Contact Information
Please send your submissions and any inquiries to: manuscriptsub2026
[at] gmail.com <http://gmail.com>
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