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[Commlist] Call for abstracts: Intimacy and visual communication on social media
Wed Feb 20 12:32:12 GMT 2019
Call for abstracts: Intimacy and visual communication in social media
Sharing (intimate) photos has become an integral part of close
relationships in the age of social media. Particularly young people use
social media as a way to establish and maintain strong social ties
rather than a way of connecting to public life. This use pattern
includes the sharing of photos and videos with intimate and sexual
content such as nudes, intimate situations and other types of
self-disclosure. As most public and academic interests has been related
to situations where the process has gone wrong and people have been
hurt, they are often associated with risk, worries and, indeed, moral
disdain. Yet these cases are part of a much broader social practice,
which is for the most part unproblematic and mundane. The sharing of
intimate photos can be seen as part of a more general act of (mutual)
self-disclosure in order to establish trust, and it can be seen as an
exploration of sexuality and social identities. In both cases the
sharing of intimate photos becomes part of more general processes of
intimacy and close relationships that we should be careful not to reject
or problematize as a whole.
Accordingly, in this themed issue we would like to move beyond the
‘stories of problem youth’ and toward a more empirically grounded and
systematic analysis of the complex ways in which the sharing of intimate
photos becomes part of everyday life practices including friendships,
courtships, trust and intimacy – across all life phases. This may
include studies of the roles intimate photos may have in the maintenance
of friendships and romantic partnerships, the ways in which people
negotiate trust and responsibilities in relation to this, and the
specific place of risk in these interactions. It may also include more
historical studies foregrounding differences and similarities to earlier
practices of intimacy, friendships and sexual partnerships, and the ways
gender and life phase condition and is conditioned by such practices.
It may include case studies zooming in on specific turning points where
unproblematic practices turns into contested or even criminal offences.
Further, articles could also focus on situations where people restrict
or prevent others from using photos in an undisclosed matter. Finally it
may include more political-economic analyses of the way specific social
platforms condition such practices and capitalize on them, and the wider
implications this may have for citizens’ rights and security in the
digital network society.
Please submit an extended abstract of 1000 words by May 15^th on
MedieKultur’s website: www.tidsskrift.dk/mediekultur
Authors will be notified by May 30^th, and the deadline for final
submissions is August 31^st .
Articles that are accepted for further process by the editors will go
into peer-review in September. Expect to have decisions on manuscripts
and potential further revisions end of September. Publication is planned
for the end of 2019.
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