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[ecrea] CFP Media Fields Journal -- Digital Distribution
Thu Oct 16 15:05:24 GMT 2014
CFP Media Fields Issue 10: Digital Distribution
Submission Deadline: October 24, 2014
In the past few years, media studies scholars such as Alisa Perren,
Stuart Cunningham, and Ramon Lobato, have persuasively made the case for
the importance of studying distribution. No longer considered simply the
“space between production and consumption,” distribution has quickly
become a site of study in and of itself. In its myriad forms,
distribution serves as the construction of difference, as the
instantiation of hierarchies, and, as Sean Cubitt puts it, “the material
ground of cultural dominance and political power.” Therefore, the study
of distribution increasingly becomes a key locus from which to start our
investigations into the cultural, political, and social ramifications of
media.
Alongside this newfound attention to distribution, scholars have also
begun to trace the rise and proliferation of digital technologies. Over
a decade after the coining of the term Web 2.0, and fifteen years after
the launch of Napster, the number of platforms and formats for the
digital circulation of media has skyrocketed and, consequently, their
ensuing communities have multiplied. Contemporary media studies has
turned its attention not only to digital technologies themselves but
also to the new media ecosystems emerging from these technologies.
By considering these two intertwined, burgeoning trends in media studies
scholarship, this issue of Media Fields Journal will explore how the
theorization and practice of distribution transforms in light of the
digital. If distribution is the movement of things—information,
commodities, values, etc.—through space, the digital has now complicated
what each of these aspects constitutes. The types of things that can be
distributed across media have changed; the ways these things move are
different; even the space through which they move has shifted.
Furthermore, what phenomena, technologies, and practices fall under the
purview of distribution have become more varied and disparate.
For the Digital Distribution issue, Media Fields Journal seeks
submissions that address questions about the role of distribution—as a
practice, as a space, or as a process—in light of the digital. What are
these new technologies and platforms, and how do they alter our
relationships to media content? How are relations of power between
producers and consumers restructured? How is geographical space itself
reconfigured or reimagined? How is the exchange of values and affects
facilitated by digital networks? How does the digital change the very
metaphors used to discuss distribution, such as pipes, conduits,
channels, networks, flow, etc.? In turn, how do these metaphors shape
our projects and our theories of distribution?
We invite submission that engage with the interconnections between
distribution, the digital, and space in relation to topics such as:
Geography:
Geoblocking, International Censorship, Reformatting, Global Internet
Penetration and Platform Availability, Satellite and Cable
Infrastructure, Geographical Case Studies
Informal Distribution Practices:
Piracy Practices and Networks, Do-It-Yourself Distribution, Cyber
Underworlds and the “Darknet”
Social Space:
Online Fan Practices, Social Networking, Cultures of Hacking, Social Apps
Regulation and Policy:
Cloud Governance, Net Neutrality, Spectrum Management, Privacy Rights,
Regulating E-Waste
Digital Platforms and Evolving Business Practices:
Connected Viewing and Mobile Media, Content Flow and Windowing, Web TV,
TV Everywhere, Format Theory, Digital Radio and Podcasting, Platform
Interfaces and Design, Audience Segmentation and Metadata
Essay submissions are typically 1500-2500 words. We encourage
submissions from any disciplinary approach relevant to media
distribution. Scholarly or critical contributions in atypical formats
are welcome. Along with your submission, please include a 50-word
biographical statement in the body of your email or as a separate
attachment. Email submissions or inquiries to issue editors Jennifer
Hessler and Juan Llamas-Rodriguez at (submissions /at/ mediafieldsjournal.org).
The deadline for submission is October 24, 2014.
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