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[Commlist] CFP: 'Transmedia Selves' - edited collection
Mon May 20 14:08:42 GMT 2019
CFP
*Transmedia Selves: Identity and Persona Creation in the Age of Mobile
and Multiplatform Media*
*Edited by Matthew Freeman (Bath Spa University) and James Dalby
(University of Gloucestershire)*
*
*
With digital technologies continuing to develop and expand their
functionality and reach, mobile devices have cemented their essentiality
in the average individual’s daily life. More than this, the ubiquity of
media content is one of the defining characteristic of the early 21^st
century era, in the developed world. Driven by the ongoing synthesis of
human and device in the form of mobile internet and media communications
technologies - including the behaviours, interactivities and reliances
associated with this - and as notions of media become less about
‘entertainment’ and more closely aligned with the fundamentals of a
contemporary life, traditional conceptions of ‘the self’ become perhaps
harder to define.
This edited collection aims to examine this mediated shift in the human
condition, focusing on the ways in which we synthesise with our media
content in daily life, subsequently transmediating ourselves into new
forms. While digital relationships with daily life have been said to
influence notions of fan participation (Hills, 2002) and things like
advertising (McStay, 2010), most of the extant literature around digital
technologies and mobile devices have tended to focus on commercial
interactive media forms such as promotion videos and consumer websites.
But as digital technologies and mobile devices continue to bring media
interfaces into the workings of our daily lives, a salient question is
not so much ‘/what/ is transmedia?’ but rather ‘/where/ is transmedia?’.
Today, the social significance of transmediality - itself describing
‘structured relationships between different media platforms and
practices’ (Jenkins, 2016) - has become intertwined with daily life,
shaping the construction of human identities and everyday life in ways
that goes far beyond its original definitional context of
franchise-based storytelling (Jenkins, 2006), branding (Grainge and
Johnson, 2015), and even cultural, political and heritage projects
(Freeman and Proctor, 2018). As Jansson and Fast (2018: 340) observe,
‘anyone with access to a connected media device can sign up for a social
media account, start spreading snapshots from his or her life,
recommending things to buy or places to go, even setting up a private
video channel. As media users, we are also increasingly expected to do
this.’
Building on Jansson and Fast’s attempt to argue for ‘the broadened
relevance of “transmedia identities” as a term that captures ... how
transmediatized and liquidized lives are constituted more generally’
(2018: 347), this edited collection aims to explore how we can
understand the practice of ‘using multiple media technologies to present
information … through a range of textual forms’ (Evans, 2011: 1) as that
which augments the self and our sociological, psychological and
philosophical experience of it. By ‘transmedia self’, we mean the use of
transmediated digital content - namely across mobile mobile devices - to
transform how people construct and make sense of personal identities,
with the affordances of mobile media technologies bringing the digital
and real world together in ways that creates ontologically-complex
personas across multiple media platforms. We anticipate a focus on the
ways that people continue to be driven by meaningful social connections
both on- and off-line, and how the innate human need to share stories
that allow them to be part of something larger than themselves resonates
in transmedial terms.
We invite chapters that explore the multifaceted, multi-perspectival and
cross-disciplinary ways via which the use of different digital and
mobile media across a multitude of screens, technologies, and locations
works to build the identities and personal lives of their users in a
highly experiential and personalized manner. We are especially
interested in chapters that blend traditional audience research with
recent advances in the field of transmedia research in ways that offer a
renewed description of the practices by which people engage through
multiple media devices. With a focus on mobile media, the collections
seeks to propose a new, cross-disciplinary theoretical framework based
on analyses of digital technologies like augmented reality, mobile
gaming platforms, and social media channels, each of which afford unique
interactive opportunities to build identities and personas, as well
shape how those identities and personal interweave with and
cross-pollinate our daily lives. The collection will therefore serve not
to redefine ‘transmedia’ necessarily, but rather to expand the term upon
the possibilities that sociological developments in relation to the
ubiquity of mobile media content within the context of daily life may
provide.
Possible topics for consideration may include, but are not limited to,
the following:
* Explorations of mediated humanity and reality, e.g. in a
transhumanist sense;
* Relationships between transmediality and social mobilization;
* Analyses of how we now use media to augment ourselves, e.g. the use
of augmented reality in Snapchat communications;
* Questions of identity creation in and across mediatised fan cultures;
* Sociological perspectives on the transmedia self, e.g. a Giddensian
approach;
* Philosophical approaches to the transmedia self, e.g. how mobile
media technologies are shifting meanings of identity;
* Psychological approaches to the transmedia self, e.g. relationships
between transmedia platforms, practices, and social connections;
* Practices of cross-platform play as mobile-based identity creation;
* Commercialised tensions between personal identity creation and
mobile-based advertising, e.g. 360-degree promo videos;
* Potential assimilation of contemporary ludological perspectives,
e.g. social media as continually evolving game;
* Locative considerations of the self, e.g. the outsourcing of
ourselves to devices and media forms;
* The self in time, e.g. variances in the ways that media platforms
and experiences encourage perceived notions of ‘duration’ and
‘present’.
Prospective authors should submit an abstract of 300 words to Matthew
Freeman ((m.freeman /at/ bathspa.ac.uk) <mailto:(m.freeman /at/ bathspa.ac.uk)>) and
James Dalby ((jdalby /at/ glos.ac.uk) <mailto:(jdalby /at/ glos.ac.uk)>) by August, 28
2019. Please also include a biography of around 200 words as part of
your abstract submission. Successful authors will be invited to submit
full chapters of 7,000 words, pending contract.
It is planned that the collection will be published by Routledge as part
of their Routledge Advances in Transmedia Studies
<https://www.routledge.com/Routledge-Advances-in-Transmedia-Studies/book-series/RATMS> book
series, itself series edited by Matthew Freeman.
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