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[ecrea] Call for papers - Children cultures and Media Cultures
Sat Dec 01 16:05:39 GMT 2012
CALL FOR PAPERS
Children Cultures and Media Cultures
Special issue of Communication Management Quarterly, CM – C(asopis za
Upravljanje
Komuniciranjem
http://www.fpn.bg.ac.rs/2011/10/24/cm-casopis-za-upravljanje-komuniciranjem-2/
Guest editors: Piermarco Aroldi and Cristina Ponte
COST Action IS0906, “Transforming Audiences, Transforming Societies”
Working Group 4 - Audience Transformation and Social Integration
1. Main topic
In the changing landscape of (old and new) media and their audiences,
convergence between children's and media cultures is an increasing field
of study. Among other topics, children and young people are facing the
expansion of digital TV channels addressed to kids and teens; a growing
marketing investments associated to new forms of publicity in new
platforms, such as the SNS sites or the mobile communication; new social
practices because of changing family structure and everyday rhythms,
making their lives much more institutionalised, more individualized and
lived in a culture dominated by individualized and mobile media than
past generations, to name but a few challenges. This special issue aims
to deepen our knowledge about the relation between children cultures and
media cultures as a privileged area of innovation, where a plurality of
actors and stakeholders (children, parents, educators, producers,
marketers, regulators, policy makers and, last but not least, scholars)
constantly negotiate about the meaning of childhood itself in our
globalizing societies.
This main topic can be addressed by different points of view, such as:
2. Sub topics
· Children as cross-media users: diffusion of digital devices in
the everyday life, and convergence of media brands and characters
addressed to kids and teens in a cross-platform perspective, made the
children a very peculiar audience, accustomed to engage with their
preferred contents through a wide set of channels, technologies, formats
and rituals. Both offering strategies by the producers and consumption
habits by the publics can be tackled to highlight new forms of
cross-media usage and new configurations of children as audience/users.
· Parental mediation and family negotiation: notwithstanding the
rising of mobile connectivity and out-of-home communication, family
still stands as an environment affecting both media practices and
interpretations developed by the children; at the same time, structural
change in the household and families, alongside with cultural change,
are reconfiguring values and strategies of parental mediation. What’s
new about family negotiation of media technologies and contents?
· Peer cultures and taste cultures: children are engaged in
negotiating meanings and values in their peer groups, developing
peculiar constellations of tastes and preferences and producing their
own cultures. How do media contents enter the peer groups and contribute
to shape their taste cultures? And, on the other hand, how does peer
groups belonging contribute in orienting media taste and habits?
· Agency and participation: children are social actors as well
as adults are; but at what extent media cultures allow – or claim for –
their agency and participation? After the “media savvy” or the “digital
native” kids, what kind of children audiences are the scholars
approaching? What models of “active publics” are the producers
developing in the children media?
· Media cultures, consumer cultures and the children:
convergence between media cultures and consumer cultures is visible in
such process as merchandising, where a mesh up of media texts and
promotional gadgets gathers a line of commodities under one coherent
concept, or product placement as a strategy of positioning a branded
product within a desirable media context, trying to strengthen its
image. This kind of convergence, very common in children media, rises a
lot of questions about children consumptions and exploitation. How to
answer them?
· Media and play: media contents and platforms largely entered
the realm of children play, so to make hard to distinguish them: on the
one side, videogames and consoles colonized everyday life spaces and
times, often incorporating mobile and domestic screens; on the other
side, toys and games refer to or involve characters and narratives
derived from media blockbusters. What is the media role in driving the
playing activity? How do they affect social, cognitive and identity
processes connected with playing?
· Media and socialization: media cultures intertwine
socialization, contributing to shape personal identity and social roles
acquisition, and to define what is (or not) to be accepted as “normal”
in a society; gender and age roles, moral values, lifestyles and
behaviours are reproduced, confirmed and contested in the symbolic space
of cultural productions, especially when addressed to children. What are
the trends in media culture? And in the academic approach to this topic?
What do we know about some specific issues such as gender roles,
“sentimental education”, or pro-social attitudes? And what about some
implications with children wellbeing and health?
· Regulation and provisions: in the last 15 years, media
regulators and producers contributed in establishing a set of normative
frameworks and co-regulation systems to avoid that children could be
jeopardized by inappropriate contents or contacts; public and private
institutions stimulated content providers to a suitable availability and
a better quality in their media production and broadcasting addressed to
children. Parents associations and children advocacy groups often
discussed this kind of statements. What is the “state of the art” in the
permanent negotiation between these different stakeholders about
children and media?
· Globalization and glocalisation: we are facing globalization
of both media and societies: media contents for children are more and
more globalized and marketed on a global scale, and new generations are
more likely to be “citizens of the globe”. What kind of relations
between these processes and the claim for local cultural identities?
Manuscript submission guidelines
Length and font: The articles should be prepared in Microsoft Word
programme, page format: A4; font: Times New Roman 11; double line
spacing. Original articles should not exceed 8 000 words.
3. Important dates
Submission of long abstracts (600-800 words): January, 14, 2013
Notification of the accepted proposals: February, 1, 2013
Full manuscript submission: April 29, 2013
Editorial decision of acceptance/refusal: June 30, 2013
Final version: September 30, 2013
Estimated date for publication: December 2013
4. Contact information
Please send your proposal by email to the guest editors:
Piermarco Aroldi: (piermarco.aroldi /at/ unicatt.it)
Cristina Ponte: (cristina.ponte /at/ fcsh.unl.pt)
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