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[Commlist] CfP: Childhoods in transition: Mediating "in between spaces"
Mon Jun 10 10:08:26 GMT 2019
There are 5 more days for sending in an abstract for this special issue.
We look forward to receiving your proposals.
*Childhoods in transition: Mediating "in between spaces" *
*Special issue of Interactions: Studies in Communication & Culture*
*Deadline extended: June 15, 2019*
Guest Editors: Annamária Neag and Richard Berger (Bournemouth
University, UK)
Discussions on the relationship between children & youth and (social)
media have predominantly focused on issues involving online safety,
self-image, media use and media literacy (e.g. Canty et al, 2016; Hoge &
Bickham, 2017; Livingstone et al, 2017; Nikkon & Schols, 2015;).
However, less attention has been cast on the mediated experiences of
children and youth in what we call ‘in between spaces’. These ‘in
between’ spaces can be both physical (e.g. migrating from one country to
another), and more intangible or abstract, such as re-negotiating
gender. We know that childhood and adolescence are transitional states,
which, for many, are often contradictory and difficult. Research shows
that children and teenagers have a fluid and interdependent relationship
with both the world around them and the technologies they are using
(Rooney, 2012). The work of Turkle (2011) and latterly Sefton-Green and
Livingstone (2017) highlights, for instance, that young people often
turn to the online world as it has “intense individual meanings” (p.
245) for them, away from the school and the home. In this space then,
new identities are constantly re-negotiated. As one study found,
teenagers use selfies as tools for both confirming heteronormativity and
for renegotiating and mocking gender norms (Forsman, 2017). In the ‘in
between spaces’ of migrating youth then, social media is seen to play a
vital role for maintaining social links with friends and families, and
with new acquaintances in the receiving societies (Kutscher & Kress, 2018).
For this special issue, we are seeking contributions which explore and
map the ‘in between’ spaces children and youth negotiate in their
everyday lived media experiences. We seek articles which research how
(social) media and digital technology is used/deployed in these spaces,
as tools of negotiation and transaction. For this special issue, we are
interested in seeing how these relationships are influenced or changed
because of social platforms and digital technologies.
We would welcome expressions of interest from academics working in these
fields, as well as practitioners and those who work with directly with
children/childhood in these ‘in between spaces’ (e.g. those from
NGO/charity sectors).
Submissions may cover, but are not limited to, the following:
* The transitioning of young people/youth through foster care;
* Unaccompanied minor asylum-seekers and migrant youth settling in a
new country;
* Re-negotiating gender (including trans/non-binary transition);
* Children and young people who are transitioning between being
home-schooled or from having been educated in isolated communities;
* The negotiating of new identities, such as becoming
step-son/daughter, step-brother/sister;
* Transition from high school to university/labour market
*GUIDELINES FOR SPECIAL ISSUE PROPOSALS*
Please write a 300-word statement of the overall concept of your study,
its thematic coherence and especially how it relates to the aims and
scope of the call, carefully articulating the transition under
discussion in a well-defined mediated ‘in between’ space. Please include
your name, institutional affiliation and contact details. The deadline
for sending in the proposals is the 15th of June 2019. The abstracts
should be sent to both Dr. Annamária Neag ((aneag /at/ bournemouth.ac.uk)
<mailto:(aneag /at/ bournemouth.ac.uk)>) and Dr. Richard Berger
((rberger /at/ bournemouth.ac.uk) <mailto:(rberger /at/ bournemouth.ac.uk)>).
A selection of authors will be invited to submit a full paper (from
6000-8000 words, including references) due on the 15th of October 2019.
All submissions will be peer-reviewed, and the issue is scheduled for
publication in November 2020.
Please make sure to follow the Intellect Style Guide and requirements
for images, graphs and tables available at
https://www.intellectbooks.com/journal-editors-and-contributors
<https://www.intellectbooks.com/journal-editors-and-contributors>
All inquiries about this Call for Papers can be addressed to Dr.
Annamária Neag ((aneag /at/ bournemouth.ac.uk)
<mailto:(aneag /at/ bournemouth.ac.uk)>) and Dr. Richard Berger
((rberger /at/ bournemouth.ac.uk) <mailto:(rberger /at/ bournemouth.ac.uk)>)
https://www.intellectbooks.com/asset/41518/1/ISCC_CFP_may2019.pdf
<https://www.intellectbooks.com/asset/41518/1/ISCC_CFP_may2019.pdf>
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