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[ecrea] cfp - Special Issue, Media and the Family - Journal of Children and Media
Thu Jan 31 13:32:30 GMT 2013
Journal of Children and Media
Special Issue, Volume 9 Issue 1, February 2015:
Media and the Family
Guest Editor: Kristen Harrison, Department of Communication Studies and
Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan; (krishar /at/ umich.edu)
The child-media relationship is challenging to study comprehensively in
part because much of it takes place within the context of the family
home, intertwined with the daily rituals and interactions of family
life. Research exploring children and media vis-à-vis the family context
deepens our understanding of the significance of media in the daily
lives of children, from birth until they leave the family home. In 1980
James Lull published a typology of the social uses of television in the
home, from structural (organization and regulation of family space and
time) to relational (communication facilitation and avoidance,
establishment of leisure norms, role enactment). A third of a century
and the addition of several varieties of new in-home media later, there
is a need to revisit what we know about the role of mass media in the
family context. This special issue of the Journal of Children and Media
is designed to give readers a heightened appreciation for the reciprocal
relationships between the family context, media, and child/family
interactions, habits, and rituals.
We seek empirical studies and theoretical essays that might include, for
example, research on:
- Characteristics and influences of the constant TV household
and/or TV in children’s rooms
- Background and foreground media influences on daily habits like
sleeping, mealtimes, the completion of homework, and conversation
- Parental mediation of child media use/exposure as it plays out
in the home context
- Parents, siblings, and other family members as co-audience members
- The role of media in structuring family space and time; family
rituals around media
- Media as tools in the negotiation of family hierarchy (e.g.,
selection, punishment)
- The role of media use in displacing/stimulating activities that
ordinarily take place in or around the home (e.g., face-to-face
conversation, outdoor play)
- Differences in media characteristics and uses in the homes of
diverse families of different socioeconomic means,
cultural-religious-ethnic backgrounds, immigration status, or
generational composition
Contributions to this special issue are welcomed from a wide range of
theoretical and methodological approaches. The guest editor is
particularly interested in research that addresses contextual factors
specific to the family home and the media-related activities that occur
as part of everyday life. Both qualitative and quantitative data
analytic approaches are invited.
Expressions of interest should be submitted to the guest editor as an
e-mail attachment by no later than March 30, 2013. Please include a
500-word abstract, full contact information, and a biographical note (up
to 75 words) on each of the authors. Authors of accepted abstracts will
be notified by April 30, 2013 and will then be invited to submit a full
paper to the guest editor. Manuscripts should be no more than 8,000
words, including notes and references, conform to APA style, and be
submitted by September 30, 2013. All papers will be subject to
anonymous peer review following submission.
************************************************************
Dr Cynthia Carter
Senior Lecturer
Cardiff School of Journalism,
Media and Cultural Studies
Cardiff University
Bute Building, King Edward VII Avenue
Cardiff, Wales
UK CF10 3NB
tel: (0)2920 876172
fax: (0)2920 238832
email: (cartercl /at/ cardiff.ac.uk)
website: http://www.cardiff.ac.uk/jomec
Co-editor, Feminist Media Studies
http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/rfms
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