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[ecrea] Cinema&Storia CfP extended
Thu Apr 06 20:20:57 GMT 2017
*CALL FOR PAPERS EXTENDED (20^th April 2017)*
From Public to Private. The History and Histories of Audiences in the
Global Era
«Cinema e Storia. Rivista di studi interdisciplinari» n. 1/2018
Special issue, edited by Mariagrazia Fanchi & Damiano Garofalo
The study of cinema audiences has always been considered as an ancillary
area of interest: marginalized and considered to be a trivial subject,
and in any case easily studied through text-centric analysis (the
spectator as a semiotic construction), a marketing system approach (the
spectator as the final result of film industry strategies), or as an
outcome of political propaganda operations (the spectator as a tool of
consensus). Moving away from this marginal position, in the last few
years the study of cinema audiences has obtained a new relevance,
assuming a particular significance thanks to the several
multidisciplinary investigations of social and cultural history, such as
the history of consumption, the history of tastes and, above all, the
history of cinema and TV audiences.
Several causes have contributed to this recent renewal: the birth of
European associations that are devoted specifically to cinema audiences
(e.g. ECREA, HOMER, the “Audience” workgroup in NECS) has energized
researches in this sense; the shift in focus towards non-Western
audiences, has led to the emergence of of a new World History approach
and the post-colonial perspective; experiments in new instruments from
experimental psychology and statistical sciences (big datas) have
contributed, as has the upgrading of traditional media historiography to
include archaeological or oral-historical approaches. This positive
circumstance has driven a reprise of the historiographical reflection on
audiences, and the expansion of studies and projects (among others, the
Italian Cinema Audiences project, launched by a pool of British
Universities).
Beginning with this new perspective, it is necessary to enlarge our
frame of work and to adopt a wide and inclusive approach to media
consumption, to include cinema, TV and visual and audiovisual
experiences broadly. The study of audiences necessitates an intermedial
and multidisciplinary approach in order to encompass the complexity of
media experiences: the plethora of forms that this assumes (and
assumed), their changes through space and time, the multiplicity of
connections to cultural, social, economic and identity processes. The
challenge is to legitimate audience as essential field of investigation
within film, media, communication studies, and, at the same time, to
adopt audiences as a historical source in a wider sense.
Reflecting on these topics and following this line, the «Cinema e
Storia» Journal aims to focus its following issue (1/2018) to history of
cinema audiences.
We welcome essays that address (though are not limited to) the following
topics: **
·Cinema audiences and historiographical questions;
·New approaches of cinema audience history: methods, frames, designs;
·Cinema audiences and microhistory (biographical, genealogical,
communitarian histories);
·Cinema audiences and cultural consumption;
·Cinema audiences and production studies;
·Cinema audience, sociability and social processes;
·The history of reception (movies, stars, genres...);
·Fandom and stardom;
·History and identity construction (gender, generational, sexual social,
cultural, political, national identities);
·Histories of movie theatres; histories of movie-going and urban spaces;
·Histories of cinema audiences and World History;
·Neuroscientific histories of audiences;
·Media debates and media representations of movie-goers, movie-going and
cinema experiences.
Deadlines & Guidelines
**
To propose an article please send an abstract and short biographical
note to the address (redazione /at/ cinemaestoria.it)
<mailto:(redazione /at/ cinemaestoria.it)> by 20^th April 2017.
Abstracts must be between 200 and 300 words, and may be presented in
English or Italian.
The proposal should include: five key-words, names of author(s),
institution(s) and contact details (email, telephone), together with a
short bio for each author.
If the proposal is accepted, the author/s will be asked to send the
complete article to the same e-mail address by July 31, 2017.
Contributions will be sent to two independent reviewers in a
double-blind peer review process prior to the final publication
decision. Authors may be requested to change or improve their articles
if suggested by reviewers.
Articles should be between no more than 35,000 characters in length,
spaces and notes included, but shorter articles will be also considered.
For info, please send an email to:
(mariagrazia.fanchi /at/ unicatt.it)
<mailto:(mariagrazia.fanchi /at/ unicatt.it)>and/or
(damiano.garofalo /at/ uniroma1.it) <mailto:(damiano.garofalo /at/ uniroma1.it)>
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