[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[ecrea] CFP: Global TV After 9/11 (edited anthology)
Wed Sep 24 00:11:46 GMT 2014
Chiara Ferrari: (cfferrari /at/ csuchico.edu)
Call for Papers (edited anthology)
Global TV After 9/11. Shifts in international television programs and
practices.
The anthology explores industrial, ideological, cultural, narrative, and
aesthetics shifts in the production of global television after September 11.
In the U.S., animated series - and especially those targeting an adult
audience - and satirical programs have become the flagship of
counterhegemonic narratives of and for American television, while
simultaneously being very much part of the consumer capitalist system
they question and mock (through DVD sales, merchandising, and
outsourcing). Similarly, although officially created before the events
of 9/11, dramas like Alias, 24, The Agency and The West Wing have
strongly been affected – especially in their subsequent plot development
– by the attacks on the World Trace Center and the Pentagon. The
response, in these cases, has generally been the construction of
patriotic narratives aimed at reassuring the American public against the
fear of U.S. vulnerability, while re-establishing traditional American
values such as individualism and capitalism.
Considering the shifting meaning of American television after 9/11 as a
starting point, the editor aims to open up a wide range of questions,
selecting a variety of essays that critically explore the following
issues in relation to international media industries:
- How have international responses to the catastrophic events of
9/11 affected national television productions? Have genres, formats, and
fiction in general, changed (examples: the Indian adaptation of 24, the
production of Hatufim in Israel, the original inspiration for Homeland)?
- How has TV news changed? Have official news channels lost their
credibility and satirical news programs proliferated as it has happened
in the U.S. with The Daily Show (like Al-Bernameg in Egypt)?
- How has the production of TV documentary (specifically about
surveillance) increased/changed as a result of 9/11 (examples include
HBO’s Vice Series and BBC’s Meet the Stans)?
- What processes of adaptation (audiovisual translation,
censorship, etc.) do post-9/11 U.S. TV programs go through when exported
abroad? How does a foreign country - where the consequences of 9/11
might not be as strongly and ideologically present as they are in the
U.S - import a post-9/11 TV show? How can a program remain a post-9/11
text in a country lacking a post-9/11 culture?
- How do post-9/11 irony and satire travel abroad?
- Have consumer culture and the very practices of media
consumption changed globally after 9/11? How do international audiences
perceive and “consume” 9/11 narratives?
- How has media production changed in the Middle East (where the
consequences of 9/11 where directly felt, and yet where radically
different than the U.S.)?
- Have strong global media markets (such as India) included
post-9/11 themes in their productions? If so, to what extent and with
what objectives?
Please consider submitting a 500-word abstract by November 31, and
direct all questions to Chiara Ferrari at (cfferrari /at/ csuchico.edu).
Timeline
Abstracts due by November 31, 2014;
Selection of abstracts by end of December, 2014;
Full essays (7500 words, including bibliography and notes) due by May
31, 2015;
Final (revised) drafts due by August 31, 2015.
About the volume and editor
The specific idea for the Global TV After 9/11 anthology was developed
as I completed an essay, titled: “The Taming of the Stew(ie): Family
Guy, Italian Dubbing, and Post-9/11 Television”. The article discusses
the cultural and ideological changes applied to the animated series
Family Guy - considered a flagship of post 9/11 American television -
when it is exported and translated in countries (Italy, specifically)
that lack an “official” post-9/11 culture. I have previously published
two books, including an edited anthology (Beyond Monopoly, Rowman &
Littlefield, 2010) and I have established preliminary contact with a
respected University Press.
Thank you,
Chiara Ferrari, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
Dept. of Communication Design
California State University, Chico
Personal Office: Tehama Hall 237
Dept. Office: Tehama Hall 205
(cfferrari /at/ csuchico.edu)
---------------
ECREA-Mailing list
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier and ECREA.
--
To subscribe, post or unsubscribe, please visit
http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
URL: http://homepages.vub.ac.be/~ncarpent/
--
ECREA - European Communication Research and Education Association
Chauss�de Waterloo 1151, 1180 Uccle, Belgium
Email: (info /at/ ecrea.eu)
URL: http://www.ecrea.eu
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]