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[Commlist] CFP: Fan Studies Pedagogies
Sat Jun 08 22:41:38 GMT 2019
*Special issue of Transformative Works and Cultures: Fan Studies
Pedagogies (deadline 1/1/20)*
The expansion of fan studies as an academic field, and the growing
visibility of fandom and fan activities in popular culture, have led to
more instructors using fannish activities and engagement in the
classroom, and teaching fan studies as a disciplinary focus. Teaching
fandom and fan studies means drawing from a multidisciplinary spectrum
of methodologies and foci. Yet, as fan studies itself is often a “moving
target” -- refusing, in many instances, of becoming “disciplined” enough
to match traditional academic units -- it becomes imperative to discuss
the various contributions, methodologies, ethics, and lacunae of the
field in a classroom setting. The specific pedagogical needs of the fan
studies classroom require sustained interrogation because of the
changing field of fan studies itself.
This special issue seeks submissions that specifically address the
pedagogical methods, styles, contributions, and concerns of the fan
studies course, classroom, and online space(s). We are particularly
interested in pedagogical methods drawn from fan studies, fan studies’
application to the academic environment, engagement with students’
fannish affect for pedagogical purposes, and explorations of how fan
studies itself is taught. We also seek papers that directly address the
epistemological and ethical stakes of operationalizing fans’ approaches
to their media texts for use in academic contexts, and best practices
for securing permissions for student contact with fan texts themselves.
In addition, we seek pieces that explore how teaching fandom/fan studies
engages (or doesn’t) the demands of the university institution itself.
We also welcome shorter pieces focused on particular projects/pedagogies
that have worked in the classroom, hybrid, or online setting, or
particular assignments with specific ties to fan studies methodologies.
We seek to develop the Symposium section as a useable set of lesson
plans, assessment techniques, and methodological interventions with
immediate pedagogical application. Hybrid approaches, detailing the
stakes and theory behind a particular lesson, or describing the
implementation of a fannish technique, would also be welcome here.
Potential topics include but are not limited to:
Student or Instructor fan engagement
Fan studies methodologies in the classroom
Fandom itself as pedagogical method
Administrative reaction to fan studies pedagogies
Global fan studies in the classroom
LMS (learning management systems) and their roles in the fan studies
classroom
Teaching fandom versus teaching fan studies
Engaging with race and fan studies in the classroom
Student demographic changes and fan studies
Corporate engagement with/cooptation of fandom as pedagogical opportunity
Fandom as model for the academic system
The hybrid course as relational mode in fan studies classrooms
The ethics of assessing affective engagement
Methods of assessing the creative fan studies project
Collective assignments and the expression of fannish ethics
Leveraging students’ existing fan-expertise throughout a course
*Submission guidelines*
Transformative Works and Cultures (TWC,
http://journal.transformativeworks.org/ ) is an international
peer-reviewed online Gold Open Access publication of the nonprofit
Organization for Transformative Works copyrighted under a Creative
Commons License. TWC aims to provide a publishing outlet that welcomes
fan-related topics and to promote dialogue between the academic
community and the fan community. TWC accommodates academic articles of
varying scope as well as other forms that embrace the technical
possibilities of the Web and test the limits of the genre of academic
writing.
Theory: Conceptual essays. Peer review, 6,000–8,000 words.
Praxis: Case study essays. Peer review, 5,000–7,000 words.
Symposium: Short commentary. Editorial review, 1,500–2,500 words.
Please visit TWC's Web site ( http://journal.transformativeworks.org/ )
for complete submission guidelines, or e-mail the TWC Editor (editor AT
transformativeworks.org <http://transformativeworks.org>).
Contact—Contact guest editors Paul Booth and Regina Yung Lee with
submissions, questions or inquiries at (FandomPedagogy /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(FandomPedagogy /at/ gmail.com)>.
*Due date—January 1, 2020, for estimated March 15, 2021 publication.*
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