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[ecrea] CFP--The Velvet Light Trap on Media Distribution
Wed Sep 18 13:34:35 GMT 2013
CFP: THE VELVET LIGHT TRAP #75 - MEDIA DISTRIBUTION
Deadline: January 15, 2014
Submit to: (velvetlighttrap.austin /at/ gmail.com)
Although distribution has long been known as the economic linchpin of
the media industries, it remains the least studied aspect of that
industry, conjuring images of dour economists combing through dusty
ledgers. But scholarly attention is shifting.
As recent technologies upend older distribution models, they both
facilitate alternative media cultures and drive traditional stakeholders
into new conflicts. Media distribution, once the invisible link between
production and exhibition/reception, increasingly reveals the major
struggles over cultural and economic power that have long invigorated
the field. Scholars studying contemporary media have energetically
responded to the implications of the rapidly transforming landscape of
media distribution, where new agents reroute industrial circuits and
burgeoning networks of often “illicit” circulation form. As a result,
the study of distribution now encompasses a range of methods and
approaches including not only economic analysis but also cultural
criticism, ethnography, and geo-mapping.
The last decade’s upheavals have sensitized media historians to the
long-standing effects of and struggles over distribution. Scholars have
re-explored historical subjects with newfound contemporary relevance,
such as the emergence of copyright, film libraries, labor’s attempts to
intervene in licensing content, and Hollywood’s analysis of its
audiences. Moreover, new research tools have provided access to new
sources and methods that encourage us to scrutinize received wisdom
about the emergence of the commercial film industry, classical
Hollywood’s mass audience and easy domination of world markets, and the
formation of broadcast networks, as well as the historical existence of
alternative distribution networks.
Issue #75 of VLT, “Media Distribution,” seeks to further address the
complex effects of and determinations shaping forms of media
distribution. The editors are particularly interested to bring together
historical and contemporary case studies, as well as theoretical work,
investigating the implications of struggles to control the conditions
under which media circulates. To that end, we invite submissions that
explore the economic, political, social, and aesthetic effects of media
distribution.
Suggested topics include, but are by no means limited to:
The emergence, maintenance, and transformation of commercial distribution
Audience identification, segmentation, and marketing
Screen quotas, cultural difference, and international censors
Reformatting for new technologies and translating for foreign markets
Historical studies of noncommercial or alternative distribution networks
Infrastructures of distribution
Scales of distribution: global, regional, national, local
Subcultural networks, dispersed communities, and diasporic identities
Distribution workers
VOD, streaming video, web television
Geo-blocking and transnational online distribution
Peer-to-peer sharing, black markets, and pirated content
Self-distribution, viral video, and social networking
Submission Guidelines
Submissions should be between 8,000 and 10,000 words, formatted in
Chicago style. Please submit an electronic copy of the paper, along with
a one-page abstract, both saved as a Microsoft Word file. Remove any
identifying information so that the submission is suitable for anonymous
review. The entire essay, including block quotations and notes, should
be double spaced. Quotations not in English should be accompanied by
translations. Photocopies of illustrations are sufficient for initial
review, but authors should be prepared to supply camera-ready
photographs on request. Illustrations will be sized by the publisher.
Permissions are the responsibility of the author. Send electronic
manuscripts and/or any questions to (velvetlighttrap.austin /at/ gmail.com).
About the Journal
VLT is a scholarly, peer-reviewed journal of film, television, and new
media studies. It publishes articles and interviews written with the
highest scholarly standards yet are accessible to a broad range of
readers. The journal draws on a variety of theoretical and
historiographic approaches from the humanities and social sciences and
welcomes any effort that will help foster the ongoing processes of
evaluation and negotiation in media history and criticism. While the VLT
maintains its traditional commitment to the study of American film, it
also expands its scope to television and other media, to adjacent
institutions, and to other nations' media. The journal encourages both
approaches and objects of study that have been neglected or excluded in
past scholarship.
Graduate students at the University of Wisconsin at Madison and the
University of Texas at Austin coordinate issues in alternation, and each
issue is devoted to a particular theme chosen by the graduate-student
editors. VLT’s Editorial Advisory Board includes such notable scholars
as Charles Acland, Richard Allen, Harry Benshoff, Mark Betz, Michael
Curtin, Kay Dickinson, Radhika Gajjala, Scott Higgins, Jon Kraszewski,
Diane Negra, Michael Newman, Nicholas Sammond, Beretta Smith-Shomade,
Jacob Smith, Jonathan Sterne, Cristina Venegas, and Michael Williams.
VLT’s graduate-school editors are assisted by their local faculty
advisors: Mary Beltrán, Ben Brewster, Jonathan Gray, Michele Hilmes, Lea
Jacobs, Derek Johnson, Vance Kepley, Charles Ramírez Berg, Thomas
Schatz, and Janet Staiger.
Recent & Forthcoming in VLT
No. 72 - Useful Media: Industrial, Educational, Institutional (Fall 2013)
Patrick Feaster on the Phonograph as a business tool
Giles Taylor on military uses of early widescreen cinema
Sara Sullivan on US Steel’s public relations films
Benjamin Strassfeld on The Birth of a Baby (1938) in commercial theaters
Lisa Rabin on Human Relations Films in East Harlem
No. 73 - Media Cultures of the Early Cold War Era (Spring 2014)
Michael Baskett on Japan’s film festival diplomacy
Ken Provencher on runaway productions in Japan
Noah Tsika on corporate-sponsored films in West Africa
Abigail Hinsman on the U-2 Spy Plane and the epistemology of intelligence
Fred Turner on the Osaka EXPO 70 and the Pepsi Pavilion
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