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[ecrea] CFP: Textual Reception – Exploring Audiences’ Writing Practices from a Gender Perspective
Thu Sep 29 16:00:33 GMT 2016
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CFP: Textual Reception – Exploring Audiences’ Writing Practices from a
Gender Perspective (special issue of Genre en séries / Gender in Series)
Editors: Sébastien François (Labex ICCA, Université Paris 13) and
Thomas Pillard (IRCAV, Université Paris 3)
Whether through fan mail sent to celebrities and the popular press,
critical pieces, derivative narratives such as fan fictions and other
outlets, media audiences have often chosen writing as a privileged way
to extend their experiences of reception. In very different contexts
indeed, individuals have written about the cultural objects they loved
or execrated, using various media to express themselves. If preserved
and accessible, all these texts can reveal a lot about their authors,
but also about the composition and structure of the audiences they
belong or have belonged to. Above all, they are spaces in which the
making of gendered identities and relationships within these audiences
can be observed, providing scholars valuable resources to study media
reception from a gender perspective.
This special issue of /Gender in Series/ aims to gather works dedicated
to the analysis of audience's writing practices through the lens of
gender, broadly speaking, to illuminate both the media cultures and the
social discourses produced by these specific audiences. Previous works
have already showed how “ordinary”, “domestic” or “fan” writings may be
highly gendered and researchers are therefore invited to provide new
case studies. Contributions that focus on the writers’ profiles, their
writing and, if applicable, publishing conditions, are particularly
encouraged, as well as those interested in the social meanings and uses
of audience’s texts from individual or collective perspectives. In the
line of works that have explored the relation between reading and gender
or the construction of identities through mass media, it seems essential
to understand how these writings can be means of self-presentation or
how they convey ideological representations and determinations about
gender. It is all the more important since they are inspired by cultural
contents which are themselves embedded within social and gendered norms.
Besides, as writing forms continue to have a central role – offline and
online – in reception practices, this special issue also welcomes
comparative works establishing bridges between different kinds of
writing materials or between heterogeneous eras or contexts: identifying
the proximities or ruptures within forms of textual reception will be
helpful to discuss how media cultures and gender issues interact and how
these interactions may change in time.
Contributors should feel free to focus on any type of written textual
reception, whatever its content (correspondence, commentary, fiction,
etc.) or media (paper, digital, etc.), and whether the texts were
supposed to be publicly released or to remain in the private sphere.
This special issue wishes to address textual reception in its diversity:
articles may deal with objects of affection (or disgust) from literary,
musical and audiovisual fields or deal with celebrities related to arts,
sports or even politics. Proposals from any of the different social
sciences (sociology, history, film and television studies, cultural and
media studies, etc.) will be considered, provided the analysis is based
on empirical material, derived from archives, ethnographic research
and/or digital research. Articles may deal with the most involved
amateurs, such as “fans”, but may also focus on more “ordinary” cultural
consumers, as long as they have taken a pen or a keyboard to express
themselves. Finally, even if studies about writings produced between the
end of the nineteenth to the twenty-first century are preferred, more
comparative works or approaches relying on older writings will, when
appropriate, be taken into account.
Full CFP (with additional research directions, references, and practical
information):
http://www.thomaspillard.fr/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/CFP-Gender-in-Series-Textual-Reception.pdf
(suggested references:
http://genreenseries.weebly.com/bibliographie-appel-numeacutero-7.html)
Abstracts should be sent to the coordinators of this special issue:
- Sébastien François: (sebastien.francois /at/ rocketmail.com)
- Thomas Pillard: (thomas /at/ pillard.nom.fr)
Important dates:
- Deadline for submissions: November 30, 2016
- Notification of acceptance or rejection: December 15, 2016
- Reception of full papers: March 1, 2017
- Reviews sent to authors: May 2017
- Reception of final articles: September 1, 2017
- Online publication: Fall 2017
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