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[ecrea] CFP Special Issue for Critical Studies in Television: Ephemeral Television
Mon Feb 23 19:19:01 GMT 2015
Cathy Johnson and Elke Weissmann
CFP Special Issue for Critical Studies in Television: Ephemeral Television
Raymond Williams’s Television as a Cultural Form (1974) continues to be
considered a central text in television studies. Despite its role in
identifying aspects of medium specificity and its standing in the
television studies canon, very little television research has actually
looked at aspects of ‘flow’ as Williams described it: namely the
intersection of different texts into the main programme text. What such
a description highlights (as Jonathan Gray (2010) has explored in his
study of media paratexts) is the centrality of smaller, non-programme
texts to the experience of television, and the role of intersecting
meanings assembled from a variety of sources. At the same time, however,
digitalisation is transforming television, challenging the nature,
composition and significance of television’s flow. New textual forms,
such as interfaces, websites, games and apps, increasingly shape our
interactions with programmes, channels and broadcasters. What these new
textual forms have in common with the interstitial texts the constitute
Williams’ flow of linear broadcast television is their ephemerality.
In his edited collection, Ephemeral Media, Paul Grainge (2011)
demonstrates the value of subjecting ephemeral media texts to academic
scrutiny. This special issue of Critical Studies in Television aims to
build on this work in order to focus attention on, first, the often
overlooked ephemera that circulate in and around television and, second,
the intersecting meanings raised by them in relation to programmes,
channels, broadcasters and the nature of television itself. The term
ephemeral suggests the transient and short-lived, and this special
edition is interested in articles on both short-form and (apparently)
short-lived media forms that circulate around television programmes,
such as trailers, adverts and idents. However, the editors also invite
papers that challenge us to consider the nature of television ephemera
today and in the past, through explorations of new ephemeral forms such
as the electronic programme guide, web interfaces and social media, and
their historical antecedents. The editors welcome papers that could
address (but need not be restricted to) the following themes:
· Historical and contemporary examples of flow or ephemeral
television such as trailers, adverts, weather reports, channel idents,
continuity announcements, websites, interfaces, apps, interstitials etc.
· Changes to the understanding and standing of ephemeral
television as a result of digitalisation and a diversity of forms of
engagement with television
· Ephemera connected to television that intersect with the
programme text or institutional meanings, such as Twitter feeds,
additional content, broadcaster/programme websites etc.
· The production cultures of ephemeral television, including
issues related to creativity, labour, the organisation and management of
work, scheduling and curation, and so on.
· The challenges that analysing television ephemera raise for
television studies conceptually and methodologically, and the problems
television ephemera raise for archiving.
·
Proposals for articles of 5,000-6,000 words, in the form of an abstract
of 400-500 words should be submitted to the editors of the special
edition (Catherine Johnson: (Catherine.Johnson /at/ nottingham.ac.uk), and Elke
Weissman: (Elke.Weissmann /at/ edgehill.ac.uk)) by 29 May 2015. Authors will be
informed of acceptance in July 2015. Final articles will be due in
December 2015. All articles will be subject to peer review.
Elke Weissmann
Reader in Film and Television
Edge Hill University
Ormskirk, L39 4QP
01695 584680
(weissmae /at/ edgehill.ac.uk)
Recent publications include Transnational Television Drama: Special
Relations and Mutual Influences between the US and the UK
(http://us.macmillan.com/transnationaltelevisiondrama/ElkeWeissmann
)and (ed. with Helen Thornham) Renewing Feminisms: Radical Narratives,
Fantasies and Futures in Media Studies
(http://www.ibtauris.com/Books/Society%20%20social%20sciences/Society%20%20culture%20general/Media%20studies/Renewing%20Feminisms%20Narratives%20Fantasies%20and%20Futures%20in%20Media%20Studies.aspx?menuitem=)
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