[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[ecrea] Call for Chapters - Mobile Gaming in Asia: Politics, Culture and Emerging Technologies
Mon Oct 27 21:57:19 GMT 2014
Call for Chapters
Mobile Gaming in Asia: Politics, Culture and Emerging Technologies
Edited by Dal Yong Jin, Ph.D., Simon Fraser University. To be published
by Springer in October 2016
The dramatic improvement of mobile phones, tablets, and game consoles
has fundamentally changed our daily lives. While the bite-sized software
programs people loaded onto their mobile phones seemed to be frivolous
games until several years ago, smartphones and their applications have
recently created new capital for information and communication
technology corporations and changed the way people communicate. While
many countries have invested in mobile industries since the early 21st
century, several Asian countries have become some of the centers for
mobile technologies and culture with their global smartphone
manufacturers, such as Samsung and LG in Korea, HTC in Taiwan, Huawei
and Lenovo in China. Although these countries were once lagging behind
in the penetration of mobile phones, Asia exists as an interesting
test-bed for the future of mobile technology and culture because several
Asian countries advance several new mobile games based on their
smartphones and application. The recent emergence of the smartphone
industry and mobile gaming in Asia can be attributed to favorable
information technology policies, severe competition among IT
corporations, and enthusiastic mobile game users in the region. Equally
important is the role of local smartphone applications, which have
provided convenient smartphone platforms for local game users. Asians’
engagement with smartphones and related mobile apps suggest that the
smartphone becomes a symbolic and material resource for people’s mobile
game lifestyle.
SCOPE
Despite the significance of smartphones and mobile gaming in both
digital economy and youth culture across the globe, there has been a
lack of academic literature exploring how mobile phones are integrated
into the socio-economic and cultural landscapes of a particular local
game context, and how smartphone users engage in the process. This
volume looks into a hitherto neglected focus of inquiry, a localized
mobile landscape emerging with the smartphone and its apps, with
particular reference to Asians’ engagement with mobile gaming. This
edited volume focuses on not only the celebratory achievement of local
mobile games, but also the significance of the social milieu in the
development of Asian mobile gaming culture. It also investigates several
dimensions in the growth of mobile game technologies and culture,
including government policy through the lens of globalization theory.
Although it seeks to identify factors for the growth of local mobile
games, it will also critically examine significant conflicts between
global and the local forces. Given that users are the primary actors
propelling the smartphone era forward, the volume analyzes how
smartphones have taken shape within the context of Asia’s particular
mobile culture.
We welcome research by emerging Asia-focused or Asian-based scholars
whose work has not been published in English.
Possible topics for submissions include but are not limited to:
*History of the growth of mobile gaming as a regional/global industry,
discourse, and media product
*Critical interpretation of emerging local game industries in Asia
*Comparative mobile game studies
*Mobile games and globalization/regionalization
*Convergent technologies and the impact on established modes of
mobile/social game play
*Government regulations and types of mobile game play
*Mobile game fandom and free labor
*Mobile gaming as social technology/media
*A culturally specific aesthetic to the production and consumption of
mobile games
*New media and experimental mobile gaming
*Gendered consumption and production of mobile games
*Mobile gaming and the role of apps
*Moral panics about mobile gaming (especially among religious communities)
*Concerns about mobile gaming addiction and consequent policy changes
*Traditional dominance of the market by Asian developers
*Unique ways in which specific Asian countries have adopted mobile devices
*Intellectual property issues particular to the region
*Tendency for big developers to look to Asia for outsourcing and
localization
*Case studies to gaming in places such as Korea (PC Bangs/StarCraft
tournaments etc.)
SUBMISSION
Please submit proposals of up to 800 words, and a brief (300-word)
author bio in an e-mail attachment by 30 May, 2015, to Dal Yong Jin
((yongjin23 /at/ gmail.com)). Authors of accepted proposals will be notified by
15 July, 2015, and invited to submit a full paper by 15 October, 2015.
Manuscripts should be no more than 8,000 words, including notes and
references, and conform to APA style. All chapters will be subjected to
anonymous peer review following submission.
---------------
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]