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[ecrea] Call for Chapters - Script Development: International Perspectives
Mon Jul 10 16:28:41 GMT 2017
Call for Chapters - Script Development: International Perspectives
Edited by Craig Batty and Stayci Taylor, RMIT University (Australia)
Script development is a crucial creative process in the production of a
screen work. It is a creative, commercial and social practice in which
ideas, emotions, people and personalities combine, cohere, clash and are
contested by the practicalities, policies and rapid movements of the
screen industry. It is also an activity usually controlled by
hierarchical and financial powers, yet experienced by individual
practitioners and groups who are simply trying to tell their stories to
an outside world. With the rise of new forms of digital technology, new
kinds of script development are also being facilitated – online, for new
and networked platforms, and for transmedia story worlds. While these
practices are increasingly available to a broader spectrum of
practitioner than historically, they are nevertheless convoluted and
difficult to track and trace.
Following on from a special issue of the Journal of Screenwriting(due
out November 2017), which lays the foundations for this book, we are
looking for chapters that have a tight and specific focus. To put it
another way, this collection is intended to explore singular instances
of script development ‘in action’ across various countries and cultures.
Interested in both mainstream and niche practices across all forms of
screen media, the book aims to present a rich and diverse set of
analyses of script development that assist us in further understanding
what it is, what it looks like, and how it is being approached in
various personal, industrial and geographic contexts. We are
particularly keen to hear from authors who can reference very specific
practices (e.g., case studies), with a view to creating a collection
that represents a truly international look at script development in all
of its guises. Co-authorship across countries and institutions is
encouraged where possible.
The book will be pitched to Palgrave Macmillan, who have already
expressed a strong interest in the project. The full proposal (including
author abstracts and bios) will be sent to the publisher very soon after
the selection process has taken place.
Please e-mail abstracts (250-300 words) plus author bios (100 words per
author) to (craig.batty /at/ rmit.edu.au) <mailto:(craig.batty /at/ rmit.edu.au)>by
Monday 2nd October. Draft chapters (4500-5000 words) are likely to be
due in the middle of 2018, with a final delivery date of late 2018.
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