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[ecrea] CFP: The Velvet Light Trap Issue 83 - Politics of Space and Place
Wed Aug 23 20:45:08 GMT 2017
*/The Velvet Light Trap /Issue 83 - Politics of Space and Place*
At the outset of /Space and Place: The Perspective of Experience/, Yi-Fu
Tuan observes, "Space and place are basic components of the lived world;
we take them for granted. When we think about them, however, they may
assume unexpected meanings and raise questions we have not thought to
ask." Power relations are often negotiated through space and embedded in
place, and these dynamics resonate through and within media. As such,
media studies stands to offer an important contribution to the critical
study of space and place, just as this important area of study may help
us to reorient and reimagine foundational premises and concerns within
our field.
Studies of space and place, both real and represented, have developed
across multiple areas of inquiry within media studies, from theory to
history to criticism and analysis. The turn toward transnationalism
within the examination of national cinemas has reorganized ongoing
investments in understandings of nation, borders, and cultural
identities. Scholarship at the intersection of urban studies and media
studies has analyzed media texts alongside the history of architecture
and of urban development. Following foundational work on movie theaters
and living rooms, recent work in media studies has considered the video
store, the arcade, and airplanes as spaces of media consumption.
Scholars have shown how public policy not only shapes access to media
but its very content -- fundamental concerns for conceptions of local,
regional, and national media as well as the identities of its producers
and consumers. This interdisciplinary and innovative scholarship
inspires the next issue of /The Velvet Light Trap/, which seeks articles
that offer generative case studies in media history, theory, or analysis
while also advancing the various avenues of spatial inquiry in media
studies.
We seek original scholarship of 6,000-7,500 words that engages with the
politics of space and place, either real or represented. What areas have
gone understudied in the current work in the field? What value may be
found in studying differences in the rural, the urban, the local, the
regional, the national -- and all other designations of place -- within
media narratives, production, distribution, and consumption? How might
studies of space decenter or revise established notions of authorship,
genre, textuality, and industry?
Possible areas of inquiry include but are not limited to:
· Mobility, migration, and borders
· Spaces and places of exhibition
· Architecture, cultural geography, or public policy in media studies
· Performance and space
· (Re)constructing place in film and television
· Space and/in genre
· Locative media and the technologies of space/place
· Local and/or regional media
· Identity, belonging, and place
· Questions of accessing media(ted) spaces
· Place and affect, memory, and nostalgia
· Spaces of media(ted) protests
**
*Submission Guidelines*
Submissions should be between 6,000 and 7,500 words, formatted in
Chicago Style. Please submit an electronic copy of the paper, along with
a separate one-page abstract, both saved as a Microsoft Word file.
Remove any identifying information so that the submission is suitable
for anonymous review. Quotations not in English should be accompanied by
translations. Send electronic manuscripts and/or any questions to
(vltcfp /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(vltcfp /at/ gmail.com)> by January 15, 2018.
**
*About the Journal*
/TVLT/ is a scholarly, peer-reviewed journal of film, television, and
new media. The journal draws on a variety of theoretical and
historiographical approaches from the humanities and social sciences and
welcomes any effort that will help foster the ongoing processes of
evaluation and negotiation in media history and criticism. While
/TVLT/ maintains its traditional commitment to the study of American
film, it also expands its scope to television and other media, to
adjacent institutions, and to other nations' media. The journal
encourages both approaches and objects of study that have been neglected
or excluded in past scholarship.
Graduate students at the University of Wisconsin at Madison and the
University of Texas at Austin coordinate issues in alternation, and each
issue is devoted to a particular theme. /TVLT/'s Editorial Advisory
Board includes such notable scholars as Charles Acland, Richard Allen,
Hector Amaya, Ben Aslinger, Caetlin Benson-Allott, Mark Betz, Michael
Curtin, Kay Dickinson, Lisa Dombrowski, Bambi Haggins, Daniel Herbert,
Scott Higgins, Mary Celeste Kearney, Lucas Hilderbrand, Roberta Pearson,
Avi Santo, Jacob Smith, Jonathan Sterne. /TVLT/'s graduate student
editors are assisted by their local faculty advisors: Mary Beltrán, Ben
Brewster, Jonathan Gray, Lea Jacobs, Derek Johnson, Vance Kepley, Shanti
Kumar, Charles Ramírez Berg, Thomas Schatz, and Janet Staiger.
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