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[ecrea] Call for Chapter Proposals - Book on Children's Media
Fri Dec 18 10:31:53 GMT 2015
Call for Chapter Proposals for Book Proposal
The editors are seeking chapter proposals for a collection of essays
that examine childrenâs media for non-stereotypical and/or
counter-stereotypical portrayals of gender identities and sexualities.
Proposed Title: Challenging Traditional Representations: Breaking gender
and sexuality stereotypes in childrenâs media
Editors: CarrieLynn D. Reinhard (Dominican University) & Christopher J.
Olson (Dominican University)
Purpose: Research reveals that childrenâs programming contains
numerous stereotyped representations of gender and sexuality.
Furthermore, these stereotyped representations often advance binaristic
notions of gender and sexuality that do not necessarily reflect the wide
array of sexual and gender identities that exist in the real world.
Currently, much of the public discourse surrounding these concepts
focuses on their fluidity or lack thereof, and therefore we believe it
becomes vital to understand whether childrenâs media reflect these
prevailing sociocultural messages, and if so, how they conform to or
resist such notions. Thus, it is important to identify those media and
pop culture texts that reflect progressive social and cultural values
regarding the fluidity of gender identity and sexuality.
The essays in this volume will identify and analyze childrenâs media
that demonstrate and reflect the wide range of sexualities and gender
identities. In particular, these essays will focus on a variety of
different characters that demonstrate non-stereotypical sexualities and
gender identities. The essays chosen for this collection will work
together to examine the presence of these messages in media meant for
children, including animated series, comic books, movies, and video
games. Each essay will consider how the different texts reflect,
reinforce, and/or challenge sociocultural notions regarding sexuality
and gender identity. This collection is designed to reveal how these
messages become disseminated across the entire media ecology with which
children engage.
Proposed Structure: This collection will consist of an introduction, a
conclusion, and ten essays exploring this topic across a range of
childrenâs media.
* Each essay should contain original scholarship on this topic.
* Essays should consider any media text meant for children (i.e.
animated series, feature film, video game, comic book, etc).
* Essays may consider non-stereotypical and/or
counter-stereotypical representations of gender identities and/or
sexualities.
* Essays should be 8000-9000 words long.
Essay proposals, to be considered for inclusion as a chapter, should
contain a title, your name with your university and title, and 100-150
word abstract explaining the following:
1. What childrenâs media text you will analyze.
2. What aspect of the media text you will analyze.
3. The importance of this aspect.
4. The potential conclusion drawn from your analysis.
The following presents information as to what will be covered in the
introduction and conclusion chapters, as well as an example of an essay
examining the media text Adventure Time.
Sample Table of Contents
Introduction: Looking past stereotypes of gender identity and
sexuality in childrenâs media
CarrieLynn D. Reinhard (Associate Professor, Dominican University) and
Christopher J. Olson (Adjunct Professor, Dominican University)
In this introduction, CarrieLynn Reinhard and Christopher Olson will
describe the prevalence of research into childrenâs media that
demonstrates how the predominant messages about gender identity and
sexuality tend to reflect stereotypical notions of gender as a binary
that features male on one end and female on the other. Given the rise in
public discourse and popular culture of ideas that challenges these
stereotypes, the authors argue for the need to examine childrenâs
media with an eye toward uncovering non-stereotypical or
counter-stereotypical messages. More recent concepts and theories of
gender identity and sexuality that challenge these stereotypes will be
introduced here to serve as the foundation for their use throughout the
collection.
A Computer Boy or a Computer Girl?: Adventure Time, BMO and gender
performance
Christopher J. Olson (Adjunct Professor, Dominican University)
This chapter analyzes the construction and depiction of the Adventure
Time character BMO. The authors argue that BMO highlights how gender
identity functions as a fluid construct that individuals negotiate and
renegotiate via positionings and social interactions. To determine how
the series encodes the concept of gender identity, the authors conducted
a textual analysis of Adventure Time, focusing specifically on episodes
that feature BMO. Through this analysis, they determined that BMO
highlights and reinforces the idea that gender exists as a sociocultural
construct imposed upon individuals by both themselves and through their
interactions with others. Furthermore, BMO illustrates that individuals
can negotiate between the two binary oppositions of gender dictated by
society. Drawing upon Zizi Papacharissiâs concept of the networked
self, the authors believe this construction and depiction of BMO
represent a networked gender, which further illustrates the fluidity and
performativity of the concept of gender.
Conclusion: New role models for children?
Christopher J. Olson (Adjunct Professor, Dominican University)
In the conclusion chapter, Christopher Olson will synthesize the ideas
put forth in the various chapters to discuss the importance of
understanding such messages that occur throughout the media ecology due
to its prevalence in childrenâs lives, while also identifying areas of
ecology that have not been studied enough and other types of messages
not considered within these pages. Thus, the conclusion will consider
how people in turn respond to those messages, and propose how other
avenues of study can build off the theoretical and analytical foundation
laid with this volume.
If interested, please email the authors with your proposal by January
15th, 2016 at:
CarrieLynn D. Reinhard: (creinhard /at/ dom.edu)<mailto:(creinhard /at/ dom.edu)>
Christopher J. Olson: (colson /at/ dom.edu)<mailto:(colson /at/ dom.edu)>
CarrieLynn D. Reinhard
Associate Professor, Communication Arts and Sciences
Director, Social Media Minor
Undergraduate Faculty Associate, Borra CTLE
Dominican University
http://www.playingwithresearch.com
http://ducommstars.wordpress.com
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