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[ecrea] cfp - Special Issue "A New History of the Telephone"
Sat Dec 23 17:35:38 GMT 2017
[Reminder: Special Issue "A New History of the Telephone" - deadline for
submissions 31 December 2017]
*A /New/ History of the Telephone: Inter-medial*/*Inter-technological
and Transnational Perspectives*
/ Guest editors: Gabriele
Balbi and Christiane Berth/
The history of the telephone has often been written from a single-medium
and national perspective. Histories of the telephone are mainly based on
national case studies and do not connect this device with other
technologies. Consequently, it is time to advance the historiography of
the telephone in two directions. This special issue aims to reconsider
the history of the landline and mobile telephone by placing it in an
inter-medial/inter-technological and transnational perspective. This
means that contributions should (re)read the history of this medium
considering first its relationship to other fields of technology, for
example, the area of communication or transportation. Second, we invite
contributions that examine how the telephone has included, excluded, or
even fought contemporary technologies in different times and across
different geographical spaces. Thus, we are seeking pieces that explore
the telephone’s interactions with different technologies and different
cultures from the late 19th through the early 21st century, welcoming
also a /longue durée/perspective.
This special issue addresses different theoretical aims: first, it aims
to merge media and telecommunications studies, two branches that have
frequently been kept separated. Media history has often been interpreted
as /mass/ media history, focusing on the press and broadcasting, while
adopting mainly institutional and cultural studies perspectives.
Telecommunications history, on the other side, is a field mainly
explored by historians of technology and business so it has often
focused on the technical or economical dimensions of networks. This
special issue would like to offer a convergence of the history of mass
media with the history of the telephone. In general, media convergence
is considered a late 20^th -century phenomenon and an effect of
digitization. On the contrary, we aim to demonstrate that forms of
convergences among different technologies were already happening in the
late 19^th and early 20^th century thanks to the telephone.
Second, media convergence is linked with inter-mediality or
inter-technology. Media scholars agree on the fact that different media
are all interrelated and analyze this phenomenon as inter-medial or
media system logic. This inter-medial and inter-technological element is
the dominant theme of this special issue. For example, the history of
mobile telecommunications needs to consider interactions with the
history of landline telephones, wireless telegraphs, computers, and the
web as well as photography and phonography in terms of sound storing.
Thus, communication media cannot be studied in isolation. By contrast,
their economic, technical, sociocultural, and even anthropological
dimensions can only be understood in the context of the media systems in
which they play an integral role. At the same time, the history of the
telephone needs to be studied in the context of the non-communication
technologies that shape it. Indeed, technologies, apparently unrelated
and far from telephony, can shape governmental policies, business
strategies, technological networks, and users’ experiences. Keeping the
example of the history of mobile phone, we need to consider it in
connection with trains, cars, planes, and electrical networks.
Finally, this special issue will introduce telephone history as a
transnational, “entangled” history. This means analyzing historical
interactions in the context of capitalism, colonialism, and
decolonialism, multinational enterprise, development cooperation,
(neo)liberalism, and privatization of everyday life. Especially in the
second half of the twentieth century, political interventions were aimed
at reducing inequalities in access to telecommunication. Again,
inter-technological interactions were important, as the satellite
provided new opportunities for rural telephony. However, the mobile
phone closed the gap in many world regions in the late twentieth century.
Contributors can come from a wide range of disciplines, such as media
and communication studies, telecommunications, political economy,
political sciences, cultural studies, history, or geography. We are
especially interested in papers that combine a broad theoretical
analysis with historical case studies. We also invite authors to reflect
from an interdisciplinary perspective on transnational perspectives and
inter-technological methodology.
Deadlines:
-Abstracts of 250 words can be submitted to guest editors until
*December 31, 2017* and the selected ones will be notified *by January
15, 2018*.
-Accepted authors will have to submit a full paper of no more than 7,500
words by *May 2018. *All papers will undergo a double-blind peer-review
process.
-The issue is scheduled for publication in *Spring 2019*.
Please submit your abstracts by email to (gabriele.balbi /at/ usi.ch)
<mailto:(gabriele.balbi /at/ usi.ch)>and (christiane.berth /at/ hist.unibe.ch)
<mailto:(christiane.berth /at/ hist.unibe.ch)>
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