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[ecrea] CFP: The Millennial Generation and its Future Prospects
Thu Jul 21 07:40:42 GMT 2016
CFP: The Millennial Generation and its Future Prospects
Journal: Communication, Politics and Culture. Editor-in-chief Dr. Chris
Hudson
Guest Editors: Drs. Ahmet Atay & Anthony Cristiano
*Description:*
Millennials have been described in a variety of ways, as the ‘dumbest
generation’ (M. Bauerlein, 2009), ‘the want’ generation (E. Fish, 2015),
‘the rising’ generation (N. Howe & W. Strauss, 2000), the ‘most
influential consumer’ generation (J. Fromm & C. Garton, 2013), the ‘next
political’ generation (A. Novak, 2016), the ‘Muggle generation’ (A.
Gierzynski, 2013), part of the ‘faithful generation’ (J. Mabry, 2013),
and the ‘digital-only media consumer’ generation (D. Desjardins, 2015),
among other qualifications. Members of the millennial generation, or
Generation Y, were born between the early 1980s and the early 2000s.
Most of them are offspring of the baby boomers. Even though Generation X
members were known to heavily consume electronic media due to the
infancy of the Internet, the millennials were born into a
media-saturated and new consumer-driven culture. Moreover, unlike the
members of the previous generations, they are surrounded by digital
media technologies since birth. In a way, they live in a digital media
ecosystem and in fact are known as “digital natives” (J. Palfrey & U.
Gasser, 2013; A. Parment, 2012; F. Tanyel et al., 2013). While there may
not bea global culture created by the members of the millennial
generation outside of their national borders, what appears to be
emerging, however, is a transnational similarity among them due to the
shared environments afforded to them by the global nature of new media
and Internet technologies. This CFP aims to survey the state of the
current studies and findings pertaining to the role played by, and
effects of, portable devices (i.e. smartphones, new digital gadgetry,
social media networks, and other transnational web-based networks
accessed via mobile devices, etc.), as well as propose new
understandings, on diverse ethnic groups and demographics (i.e. the
impact of millennials in political culture, despite the criticism of
being disconnected and disengaged, is apparent: the role they played in
the last presidential elections in Canada, their involvement in the U.S.
political landscape through their support of Bernie Sanders, and their
overwhelming reaction to the Brexit ‘remain campaign’ is worthwhile to
note). Have millennials’ prospects and/or competencies improved compared
to previous generations? Are they demonstrating the ability to set out a
path for themselves and take charge of their own life and future—as per
the claims of visionaries like Ray Kurzweil, among others? This special
issue is particularly interested in, but not limited by, the following
points:
1)Review of current studies and findings with critical assessment of
arguments and propositions, if any.
2)Advancement of descriptions and classifications of common features and
trends among millennials, globally.
3)New insights into the culture, outlook, aspirations, and vision of
millennials, as well as difference from previous generational mindsets.
4)Prognostic depiction of future states, prospects, and/or outcomes of
current trends.
5)The creation of a ‘global millennials’ culture’; is it possible?
6)The ways in which members of the millennial generation increasingly
become cosmopolitans, and the quality or character of such cosmopolitanism.
7)New forms of addiction, anxieties, relationships, and/or distractions,
millennials are subjected to and affected by.
8)Disruptive technology and the schooling of millennials, revolutions in
higher education: where are they headed?
9)How is the complex relationship between millennials and new media
technologies changing media and cultural landscapes?
Abstracts are due by August 30, 2016, with a word length of up to no
more than 500 words, along with pertinent references, and a short
biographic blurb of 300 words. Full-length manuscripts are due on
December 30, 2016, with a word length of no more than 6,000 words and in
MLA style, including references, endnotes, and so forth. Abstracts
should be emailed as Word documents to both co-editors Ahmet Atay
((aatay /at/ wooster.edu)) and Anthony Cristiano
((anthony.cristiano /at/ utoronto.ca)) for an initial review.
*Selected bibliography:*
Atay, Ahmet. /Globalization’s Impact on Cultural Identity Formation:
Queer Diasporic /
/Males in Cyberspace/. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2015. Print.
—.“Digital Diasporic Experiences in Digital Queer Spaces.” /Click and Kin: /
/Transnational Identity and Quick Media/. Eds. May Friedman and Silvia
Schuldermandl. Toronto, Canada. University of Toronto Press. 2016.
139-158. Print.
Bauerlein, Mark./The Dumbest Generation: How the Digital Age Stupefies
Young Americans and Jeopardizes Our Future (or, Don’t Trust Anyone Under
30)/. New York, NY: Jeremy P. Tarcher/Penguin, 2008. Print.
Bibby, Reginald W, Sarah Russell, and Ronald Rolheiser./The Emerging
Millennials: How Canada’s Newest Generation Is Responding to Change &
Choice/. Lethbridge, AB: Project Canada Books, 2009. Print.
Botterill, Jacqueline, Marian Bredin, Tim Dun. “Millennials’ Use: It is
a Matter of Time.” /Canadian Journal of Communication/ 40.3 (2015):
537-551. Print.
Chod, Suzanne M., William J Muck, Stephen M. Caliendo. /Technology and
Civic Engagement in the College Classroom: Engaging the Unengaged./ New
York: Palgrave Macmillian, 2015. Print.
Cristiano, Anthony. “Internet Technologies: Digital Paradises or Digital
Hells?” in /Digital Images of Europe: Past, Present, Future/. Ed.
Yolanda Espiña. Porto: Universidade Católica Editora, 2014. Internet source.
—. “Digital Media Realities: Propositions from the Arts, Philosophy, and
Criticism.” /URAM (University of Toronto Press Journal)/ 33.3-4 (2010,
Published 2014): 208-221. Print.
Desjardins, Danielle./The Digital-Only Media Consumer: Key Findings from
a Conversation with All-Digital Millennials/. Toronto: Canada Media
Fund, 2015. Internet resource.
Ferreira, Stacey and Jarred Kleinert. /2 Billion Under 20: How
Millennials Are Breaking Down Age Barriers and Changing the World/. New
York: St Martin’s Press, 2015. Print.
Fish, Eric./China//’//s Millennials: The Want Generation/. London:
Rowman & Littlefield, 2015. Print.
Fromm, Jeff, and Christie Garton./Marketing to Millennials: Reach the
Largest and Most Influential Generation of Consumers Ever/. New York:
American Management Association, 2013. Print.
Gierzynski, Anthony, and Kathryn Eddy./Harry Potter and the Millennials:
Research Methods and the Politics of the Muggle Generation/. Baltimore:
John Hopkins University Press, 2013. Print.
Greenfiled, David. “The Addictive Properties of Internet Usage.”
/Internet Addiction: A Handbook and Guide to Evaluation and Treatment/.
Kimberly S. Young and Cristiano Nabuco de Abreu eds. Hoboken, N.J.: John
Wiley & Sons Inc., 2011. 135-153. Print.
Griffiths, Mark. “Does Internet and Computer ‘Addiction’ Exist? Some
Case Study Evidence.” /Cyberpychology & Behavior/ 3.2 (2000): 211-217.
Print.
Guzzo, Tiziana, Fernando Ferri, and Patrizia Grifoni. “Social Network’s
Effects on Italian Teenager’s Life.” /Journal of Next Generation
Information Technology/ (JNIT) 4.3 (2013): 54–62. Print.
Howe, Neil, and William Strauss./Millennials Rising: The Next Great
Generation /by Neil Howe and Bill Strauss; Cartoons by R.J. Matson/. New
York: Vintage Books, 2000. Print.
Kimberly S. Young and Cristiano Nabuco de Abreu eds. /Internet
Addiction: A Handbook and Guide to Evaluation and Treatment/. Hoboken,
N.J.: John Wiley & Sons Inc., 2011. Print.
Imperato, Rob. /The Digital Age: The Real Challenge and Effect on
Children and Parents/. Bloomington, IN: Xlibris.com, 2014. Print.
Lancaster, Lynne C. and David Stillman. /When Generation Collide: Who
They Are, Why They Clash, and How to Solve the Generational Puzzle at
Work/. New York: Harper Collins, 2002. Print.
*Luo, Shanhong. “Effects of texting on satisfaction in romantic
relationships: The role of attachment.” */Computers in Human Behavior/33
(2014) 145–152. Print.**
Luttrell, Regina and Karen McGrath. /The Millennial Mindset: Unraveling
Fact from Fiction/. Lanham, MD. Lexington Books, 2015. Print.
Mabry, John R./Faithful Generations: Effective Ministry Across
Generational Lines./ New York: Morehouse Publishing, 2013. Print.
McHaney, Roger and John Daniel. /The New Digital Shoreline: How Web 2.0
and Millennials Are Revolutionizing Higher Education/. Sterling, VA:
Stylus, 2011. Print
New Strategist Publications/. The Millennials: Americans Born 1977 to
1994/. Ithaca, N.Y: New Strategist Publications, 2004. Print.
Novak, Alison. /Media, Millennials, and Politics: The Coming of Age of
the Next Political Generation/. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2016. Print.
Palfrey, John and Urs Gasser. “Born Digital: Understanding the First
Generation of Digital Natives.” /The Millennial Generation/. Eds. David
Haugen and Susan Musser. Detroit, MI: Greenhaven Press, 2013. 35-42. Print.
Parment, Anders. /Generation Y in Consumer and Labor Markets/. New York:
Routledge, 2012. Print.
Poindexter, Paula. M. /Millennials, News, and Social Media: Is News
Engagement a Thing of the Past?/ New York: Peter Lang, 2012. Print.
Rankin, David. /US Politics and Generation Y: Engaging the Millennials/.
Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner Publishers, 2013. Print.
Schwalbe, Carol B. “Leveraging the Digital Media Habits of the
Millennials: Strategies for Teaching Journalism Courses.” /Southwestern
Mass Communication Journal/ Fall (2009). 53-68. Print.
Serazio, Michael. “Selling (Digital) Millennials.” /Television & New
Media/ 16.7 (2015): 599-615. Print.
Serres, Michel. /Thumbelina: The Culture and Technology of Millennials/.
Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield, 2015. Print.
Sujansky, Joanne G, and Jan Ferri-Reed./Keeping the Millennials: Why
Companies Are Losing Billions in Turnover to This Generation-and What to
Do About It/. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, 2009. Print.
Tanyel, Faruk, Elnora W. Stuart, and Jan Griffin. “Have ‘Millenials’
Embraced Digital Advertising as They Have Embraced Digital Media?”
/Journal of Promotion Management/ 19 (2013). 652-673. Print.
Tapscott, Don./Growing Up Digital: The Rise of the Net Generation/. New
York: McGraw-Hill, 1998. Print
Zhou, Yan et al. “Gray matter abnormalities in Internet addiction: A
voxel-based morphometry study.” /European Journal of Radiology/ 79
(2011): 92-95. Print.
Ahmet Atay, Ph.D
Assistant Professor
Department of Communication
College of Wooster
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