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[ecrea] CFP from Teaching Media Quarterly: Teaching Intersectionality and Media
Tue Sep 26 21:01:14 GMT 2017
Below is the latest CFP from Teaching Media Quarterly for the upcoming
special issue Teaching Intersectionality and Media. Feel free to
share/circulate as you see fit.
Call for Lesson Plans:
Teaching Intersectionality and Media
/Teaching Media Quarterly/ is interested in how instructors teach the
concept of intersectionality as an analytical tool for understanding
media images, messages, platforms, production, fandom, audiences, etc.
Additionally, we are interested in the ways instructors engage
critically with media to assist students’ understanding of
intersectionality and their examination of their own positionality.
Intersectionality is a term coined by Critical Race theorist,
KimberléCrenshaw and has been employed and expanded on by other
prominent feminists of color like Patricia Hill Collins and bell hooks.
Intersectionality insists that we examine relations of power and
oppression through a lens that acknowledges the various aspects of
social identities that work together to establish or intensify relations
of inequality. Intersectionality calls for reflexivity and awareness of
our own social positions. In the context of analyzing media, it
encourages an interrogation of media that acknowledges the intersecting
gender, class, and racial dimensions of media representations, or what
Hill Collins calls “controlling images.” Scholars and students of media
studies may also use it to understand other cultural phenomena such as
sexualization in media content or participation in online spaces.
Overall, intersectionality is an important concept for thinking
critically about various aspects of our media culture.
We are interested in lesson plans that are informed by, but not limited
to, the following questions:
·How does intersectionality illuminate racial and class specificities in
representations of masculinity, femininity, sexuality, etc.?
·How can intersectionality be used as a lens for understanding audiences?
·How can intersectionality be used to understand media history?
·How do the evolving media systems and platforms create or limit the
space for intersectional cultural critiques?
·How can we use intersectionality to interrogate the production and
political economy of media?
·How can we engage with intersectionality through media production or
participation in mediated spaces?
·How can intersectionality inform media research methods?
Submission Deadline: December 1, 2017
--
Caroline Bayne
Graduate Instructor
Department of Communication Studies
University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
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