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[Commlist] Call for Papers: Documentary film mutations - new opportunities for social justice
Fri Jul 19 15:50:25 GMT 2019
Call for papers: Catalan Journal of Communication & Cultural Studies
**
*Documentary film mutations: new opportunities for social justice*
Special issue CJCS 12.2 (Fall 2020)
*1 October 2019: *deadline for *abstract* submission*
**15 January 2020*: deadline for *full proposals* (selected abstracts)
/Guest Editors://
/*/Fernando Canet/*/,/ Polytechnic University of Valencia/
/*/Stefano Odorico,/*//Leeds Trinity University/
/*/Xoxé Soengas/*/, /University of Santiago de Compostela//
Cinema as a medium was born to capture aspects of reality. Such was the
initial purpose of the Lumière brothers at the end of the XIX century.
Approximately thirty years later, Robert J. Flaherty portrayed realities
far away from western societies, being the premier of his second feature
film, /Moana /(1926), which inspired John Grierson to use the term
‘documentary’ for the first time in a cinematic context. Indeed,
Grierson and his school were *pioneers in using documentary film with
social purposes, giving a voice to the victims of social
injustices* (Winston 1988). Nowadays, documentary film continues to
pursue its social role: the reporting of social issues like human rights
violations, mass violence, immigration and refugee seeking, domestic and
gender violence, gender discrimination, workers´ rights, education
rights, poverty, or housing is still the main aim of engaged documentary
filmmakers.
However, something has changed in the first two decades of the current
century: thanks to the potentialities of emerging digital technologies,
*the documentary film genre is currently experimenting, testing and
developing new forms* in order to further pursue its original aim of
documenting reality and presenting it to society. New forms of
representation, strategies of communication, participation,
mobilization, and methodologies for the evaluation of its social impact
have emerged over this period. Nowadays we should read the documentary
film form in relation to its synergies with (i) *digital media*, such as
social media and big data; and (ii) *complementary forms of
representation like animation* (Formenti 2014; Roe 2013; Skoller 2011;
Strøm 2015; Ward 2011), *immersive experiences in Virtual Reality *(de
la Peña et al 2010; de la Peña 2017; Hardee 2016; McRoberts 2018; Nash
2018; Rose 2018; Shin and Biocca 2018) *and interactive
platforms* (Aston and Gaudenzi 2012; Aston, Gaudenzi and Rose 2017;
Miller and Allor 2016; Nash 2012, 2014; Smaill 2018; Aston and Odorico
2018).
This special issue is about *how digital technology and alternative
forms of representation can help documentary films*, as socio-cultural
products, to carry out their role of reporting human rights violations
and social injustices, fostering a more “just society” (John Stuart Mill).
TOPICS
Therefore, *the issue seeks to explore how the construction of meanings
and their reception is modified by the new opportunities for documentary
film, *in the shape of alternative forms of representation and
technological changes. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
/– Animated documentary: the representation of the real through animation./
/– Web-documentary: interactive documentary practices (i-docs)./
/– Immersive documentaries and VR filmmaking: the reconstruction of
reality through virtual and augmented interactive environments and how
people experience them./
/– Transmedia practices: documentary production in association with
social media campaigns (promotion)./
/– New forms of citizen engagement, participation and mobilization./
/– Methodologies of evaluation of the social impact of documentary films
through social media analytics (quantitative and qualitative
methodologies)./
/– Using big data for monitoring reality and how these new
contents/evidences can be included in interactive platforms. Strategies
of data visualization./
Research articles should be 6,000 words in length (including notes and
references), while Viewpoint articles should not exceed 3,000 words. The
editors will carry out a preliminary selection of abstracts.
TIMELINE:
§*1 October 2019*: deadline for abstracts
Abstract (maximum 500 words), title and selected bibliography, along
with a 150-200 word author’s short bio (including your affiliation and
contact information) should be sent to Fernando Canet ((fercacen /at/ upv.es)
<mailto:(fercacen /at/ upv.es)>)
§15 October 2019: editors’ decision on selected abstracts
§*15 January 2020*: deadline for full articles
Full articles, based on the selected abstracts, should be submitted on
the /Catalan Journal of Communication & Cultural Studies/ web platform
<https://callisto.newgen.co/intellect/index.php/CJCS/about/submissions> by
*15 January 2020, *following the Notes for Contributors
<https://callisto.newgen.co/intellect/index.php/CJCS/about/submissions#authorGuidelines>.
§1 May 2020: final decision letters
§Fall 2020: issue published
/All selected contributions will be subjected to double blind peer
review, //except for the Viewpoint articles, which will be evaluated by
the Editors./
https://catalanjournal.wordpress.com/content/call-for-papers/
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