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[ecrea] CFP: The political economy of contemporary cultural production: text and context
Wed Mar 05 00:35:32 GMT 2014
Critical Arts: South-North Cultural and Media Studies
Call for Papers
Special Issue:
The political economy of contemporary cultural production:
a focus on the breach between text and context
Guest editors: Irina Turner, Bayreuth University; Dr. Rémi Tchokothe,
Bayreuth University
Most contemporary cultural production, for instance music, film,
advertisement, literature, journalism, TV, comedy or photography, is at
some stage and in some form mediated through and recontextualized in the
internet. Techniques like remixing, reshuffling and virality detach
products from their original creators and owners and question the notion
of originality and ownership per se. Authorship is now a common effort
enabling multiple formerly passive recipients to become participating
ProdUsers (Bruns 2007).
These techniques and trends are also transmitted into cultural products
of the analogue world; e.g., into theatre productions, cartoons, or fine
arts, and hence influence our world perceptions ubiquitously, i.e.
online and offline. The multimodality and simultaneousness of cultural
production turns readers and recipients of cultural texts into
hyper-connected consumers. Text is here understood in its broadest
sense, namely as any form of "readable" output.
Hyper-connectedness and internet-enabled recontextualization-chains
fascinate through their ability to create constant innovation and
seemingly self-automated recreation. Nevertheless, this makes many
cultural products appear to be removed from their original source, to
have anarchically and democratically emerged from somewhere unknown, and
to exist in empty space. While the notion of "personal experience" as a
vehicle for credibility and authenticity is the most important online
currency, intriguingly and seemingly contradictive, virtuality blurs
roots and sources to and from people and institutions and so disguises
agendas and power relations.
Recent (internet) media analyses of cultural products have celebrated
the innovation and anarchic liberation from restricting conventions of
culture production brought about by intertextuality, have focused on
intra-textual dynamics of the meaning-making process, on processes of
recontextualization and on audience effects. However, it seems to be
neglected that even the internet has a history and that (online)
cultural products are made by real people with an agenda and social
situatedness.
This special issue aims at balancing out this perceived dominant frame
in analyses, and invites papers that critically focus on the beginnings
and contexts of cultural products, i.e. their political economy, and aim
to trace the individual history of emergence. While an isolated
description of investors and agents might not bring much insight into
the interpretation of the product per se, a good starting point for
analysis is the breach between text and context and the friction point
of the product to its enabling environment; which called in-between
space by Homi Bhabha.
While previous issues of Critical Arts problematising culture as a
product have focused on (neo)colonial discourse and global capitalism
(16/1, 2002), on the question of copyright and intellectual property
(20/1, 2006), or Cultural Economy in South Africa in particular (guest
editor Narunsky-Laden: 24/1, 2010), this issue seeks contributions that
specifically shed light on dynamics of cultural productions in the
online world and their contextual relations to the offline world.
Though the internet is the dominating medium driving the feeling of
disconnected floating, the contributions may also address offline
cultural products that carry features typical for the internet such as
hyper-connectedness, simultaneous multimodality, multiple and
non-elitist authorship and constant recreation of intertextuality.
Areas of interest for this issue seeking original contributions are:
· Historical traces and contemporary examples of internet
culture and its specific products
· Enabling economic and political parameters of media and
cultural production
· Case studies of meaning-structures in cultural products with a
focus on (dis-)continuities and breaches
· Enabling or devitalizing cultural policies in specific settings
Papers can address for example:
1. The question of where (dis-)continuities in the history of the
product become visible.
2. In what way discontinuities are connected to a social reality that is
made of people with agenda and ideology.
3. Practices of intertextuality, multicontextuality, multimediality and
multimodality - critically examined.
Deadlines:
Submission of abstracts with five key words and short bio: 15 April 2014
Author notification of abstract acceptance: 15 May 2014
Submission of final papers: 30 July 2014
Publication Date: August 2015
Critical Arts Home Page:
http://ccms.ukzn.ac.za/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=151&Itemid=87
eJournals Archive (1980-1992):
http://digital.lib.msu.edu/projects/africanjournals/
Notes for Authors:
http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/authors/rcrcauth.asp
Enquiries and requests for additional information about this issue can
be directed to the editors: (irina.turner /at/ uni-bayreuth.de);
(remi.tchokothe /at/ uni-bayreuth.de)
Critical Arts is indexed on ISI, IBSS, Scopus, MLA and many other
indexes, and is SAPSE-registered.
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