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[ecrea] New Issue and CFP for Mediascape!
Fri Jun 20 18:54:50 GMT 2008
>Mediascape
>
>
>
>Mediascape, UCLA's Journal of Cinema and Media
>Studies, is excited to announce the publication
>of our Spring 2008 issue and the launch of our
>completely redesigned website. In this issue,
>our "Features" and "Reviews" sections
>investigate the theme of comedy in different
>works of film and TV. The pieces in "Columns"
>tackle Machinima from every angle:
>school-shootings, suicide bombings,
>gender/identity, problems with archival,
>amateur/professional dialectics, and
>more. Finally, our "Meta" section provides a
>space for experimental, critical evaluations of
>the traditional essay format. Please visit our new issue and website here:
>
><http://www.tft.ucla.edu/mediascape/>http://www.tft.ucla.edu/mediascape/
>
>We would also like to announce our new Call for
>Papers. In light of the upcoming election for
>the next President of the United States, the
>theme for the Fall 2008 issue will be politics
>and the political in film, television, and
>digital media. The deadline for submissions for
>the next issue is the 1st of September 2008.
>
>
>Features
>
>
>The Features section is seeking articles that
>consider politics and/or the political within
>any and all areas of media studies. Submissions
>may address themes and narratives that pertain
>to political subject matter, political struggles
>and/or exchanges that affect the media industry,
>and/or the politics of on-screen representation.
>
>
>Topics may include, but are not limited to:
>
>· The representation of political themes
>related to issues of individual political
>agency, transnational governments, special
>interest groups, post-colonial politics, and
>racial and sexual politics in film and media
>
>· The function and efficacy of political
>narratives in both fiction and non-fiction
>
>· The relationship between governments and
>media industries regarding the regulation or
>support of the production, distribution, and
>exhibition of film, television and media
>
>· The use of film, television, and digital
>media as propaganda, a political weapon,
>diplomacy, or a form of political expression
>To submit a feature article, please email a
>short bio and a copy of your manuscript in Word
>format to Mila Zuo at
><mailto:(mzuo /at/ ucla.edu)>(mzuo /at/ ucla.edu). For the
>purposes of confidentiality during the double
>blind peer review, please include both your bio
>and your personal contact information in the
>accompanying email only, rather than in the Word
>document. Feature submissions should range from
>between 15 to 25 manuscript pages.
>
>
>
>Reviews
>
>The Reviews section is seeking reviews that
>interrogate "politics" -- either as object of
>review, or as critical framework. The object of
>review can include: a film, a TV program,
>websites, online content, advertisements, a
>piece of hardware, a movie review, an academic
>conference, a business practice, a work of media
>policy anything. Presidential candidates
>websites, videos available online produced by or
>about the candidates, and media coverage of
>candidates across various platforms could
>provide particularly intriguing objects for
>review considering this issues theme. Questions that may arise include:
>
>· What is at stake in political media?
>
>· What is the direction of political media criticism today?
>
>· How have fandom and fan communities
>rewired the possibilities of political media criticism?
>
>· What is the relationship between
>aesthetics and politics in an era of intensified media convergence?
>
>· How have genres (such as comedy) shaped political discourse?
>
>· How do we "review" political media in a
>transnational medium such as the web?
>
>Reviews must be original, and creativity (in
>argumentation and/or style) is encouraged.
>Please direct Reviews section questions,
>proposals, and submissions to Brian Hu at
><mailto:(brianhu /at/ ucla.edu)>(brianhu /at/ ucla.edu).
>
>
>
>Columns
>
>The Columns section for this issue would like
>to address not politics and the political, but
>the impolitic and politically incorrect in film,
>television and digital media, and we are seeking
>short papers (800-1500 words) that may or may not address:
>
>· The effect of impolitic films on society
>
>· The relationship of impolitic films to reality
>
>· Impolitic websites, blogging, and online behavior
>
>· Impolitic journalism and political analysts/analysis
>
>· Impolitic voting habits
>
>· Impolitic fashion-sense
>
>· The rise of the impolitic voter
>
>· Impolitic parody and satire
>
>· Impolitic gameplay
>
>Please submit Columns questions, proposals,
>and submissions to Bryan Hartzheim at <mailto:(bhartz /at/ ucla.edu)>(bhartz /at/ ucla.edu).
>
>
>Meta
>
>
>META presents students and scholars of cinema
>and media the opportunity to publish work that
>exemplifies scholastic self-awarenesspapers and
>projects that contemplate academic methods,
>critique their implications and limitations, and
>propagate new approaches to media scholarship.
>META not only seeks papers discussing academic
>and professional scholarship, but also examples
>of scholarly work that defy traditional
>categories of research and publication. We
>welcome submission of podcasts, online tools,
>hypertext or Flash experiments, and we also seek
>new approaches to more conventional forms such
>as the academic article, essay, and book.
>
>
>This issues theme of politics and the political
>in film, television and digital media suggests
>some intriguing questions about scholarship,
>media and politics. What is the role of media
>scholarship relative to political discourse?
>Does scholarship in general (and media
>scholarship in particular) exhibit a polarizing
>or marginalizing liberal bias? Although
>another Paris 1968 isnt likely, can filmmakers
>and media scholars exert a more powerful
>influence on politics, culture and society than
>more recent history illustrates? These and many
>other questions are of particular interest to META for the next issue.
>
>
>If you have questions about META submissions, or
>wish to submit a paper or project for
>consideration, please contact David OGrady at
><mailto:(david /at/ davidogrady.com)>(david /at/ davidogrady.com).
>
>
>
>Please visit
><<http://www.tft.ucla.edu/mediascape/>http://www.tft.ucla.edu/mediascape/>
>for more information about Mediascape and our upcoming issue.
>
>
>
>Thank you for your support of Mediascape, and
>please share this with everyone who might be
>interested in reading or contributing to the journal.
>
>Sincerely,
>
>Brett McCracken and Jennifer Porst, Co-Editors-in-Chief
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Nico Carpentier (Phd)
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Vrije Universiteit Brussel - Free University of Brussels
Centre for Studies on Media and Culture (CeMeSO)
Pleinlaan 2 - B-1050 Brussels - Belgium
T: ++ 32 (0)2-629.18.56
F: ++ 32 (0)2-629.36.84
Office: 5B.401a
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Katholieke Universiteit Brussel - Catholic University of Brussels
Vrijheidslaan 17 - B-1081 Brussel - Belgium
&
Facultés Universitaires Saint-Louis
Boulevard du Jardin Botanique 43 - B-1000 Brussel - Belgium
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