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[ecrea] Call for papers - OBS* Special issue on The co-option of audience creativity on digital platforms
Wed Mar 07 08:51:27 GMT 2018
Call for papers - OBS* Special issue on The co-option of audience
creativity on digital platforms
Guest Editors: Ana Jorge (CECC-UCP), Inês Amaral (CECS/ISMT), David
Mathieu (Roskilde University/ECREA Audiences and Reception Studies
Section Chair)
Submission deadline: 30th March 2018
Through its 3-year of activity, the Consortium on Emerging Directions in
Audience Research (CEDAR), a network funded by the AHRC in the UK, has
observed that the co-option of audiences by large, global players is
becoming more intricate than previously. While a number of factors
account for this development, the co-option of audiences is increasingly
made possible by the appropriation of technology in the development of
digital media platforms. These media are able to turn audience’s work
and engagement into commodities for attracting attention, metrics to be
sold to advertisers and business models (Andrejevic, 2009; van Dijck,
2013; Hearn & Schoenhoff, 2016).
While user-generated content such as blogging or vlogging is a clear
sign of audience agency, there is an increased tendency for that work to
be co-opted by private and public media, hence leading to new forms of
power imbalance between media and audiences. The co-option of audiences
refers generally to the appropriation of audience labour, their ideas or
the content of their productions, for one’s own purposes, be it by media
and other organisations. But it also involves the process of gaining the
audience’s agreement and consent in contributing to the objectives of
the organisation and the establishing of new forms of relationship
between audiences and platforms. On the other hand, audiences sometimes
appreciate the recognition of their production by more established media
or producers, such as fan communities. Hence, there is an important
dialectic dimension in which co-option is negotiated, in which conflicts
and tensions arise, and in which norms, rules and roles are redefined
(Stehling et al., forthcoming).
This topic has been discussed by political economy of communication and
in particular of the web 2.0, focusing on the exploitation of audiences’
work as free labour (Andrejevic, 2009; Wasko, Murdock & Sousa, 2014;
Fuchs & Sevignani, 2013), and by cultural studies through the notion of
participation (Jenkins, 2006; Jenkins & Carpentier, 2013). However,
Vesnić-Alujević and Murru (2016) claim the urgency of finding bridges
between those perspectives.
This special issue wishes to investigate the dialectic nature of
co-option of audience creativity in blogging and vlogging platforms such
as YouTube, Facebook, Instagram etc. Can the commodification of audience
creativity and the emancipation it creates live side by side within the
same model? When a YouTuber advertises a product, is the content
different and does it entail different forms of communication to and
from the audiences? How do popular and professional or semi-professional
Youtubers, Instagrammers, etc negotiate the boundaries of their work and
retain their integrity and authenticity?
We invite contributions to answer these and other related questions by
paying attention, amongst others, to:
- the processes of produsage and co-creation of media content by the
audiences within new practices of co-option by different kinds of power;
- the commercialisation of “micro-celebrities”/“social media
influencers” (in digital platforms as YouTube, blogs, Instagram and
Facebook);
- the use of algorithms and its impact on audience creativity;
- the strategies deployed to encourage and orient (or block and prevent)
the production of content that (dis)serves the interests of non-audience
actors (owners, administrators, advertisers, etc.);
- the processes and mechanisms of translation, such as datafication,
metrification, by which audience creativity is co-opted;
- the formation and negotiation of new business models throughout the
co-option of audience labour;
- the complex landscape of cross-interests and mutual influences between
content users and producers;
- the redefinition and negotiation of audience’s roles and relations
with other actors.
For questions, please contact Special Issue Guest Editor Ana Jorge:
(anajorge /at/ fch.lisboa.ucp.pt) <mailto:(anajorge /at/ fch.lisboa.ucp.pt)>
Submissions should follow the manuscript format guidelines for OBS* at
http://obs.obercom.pt/index.php/obs/about/submissions#onlineSubmissions.
All manuscripts should be submitted to (anajorge /at/ fch.lisboa.ucp.pt)
<mailto:(anajorge /at/ fch.lisboa.ucp.pt)> , until March 30th 2018.
Manuscripts will go through a peer review process, and the Special Issue
is planned to appear in the last issue of OBS* 2018 (Sept-Dec).
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