[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[Commlist] cfp: Disability and Media – African perspectives
Tue Sep 10 07:26:33 GMT 2019
*Disability and Media – African perspectives *
Edited by Associate Professor Mike Kent (Curtin University) and Mr
Tafadzwa Rugoho (University of Kwa Zulu Natal)
http://www.cultware.com/current-research/disability-and-media--african-perspectives
*Abstracts Due 1 November 2019*
Disability media studies is a new and growing area of interdisciplinary
academic interest and particularly at the intersection of media studies
and disability studies. Trying to build a dialog between these related
yet separate disciplines around disability and media is a challenging
process. This edited collection will have a focus on disability media in
Africa. It seeks to expand some of the existing, often western and
Global North facing, scholarship in this area and expand it to include
African perspectives. In this collection we are looking to gather
writing about disability and media in Africa and also writing by
academics from Africa about disability and media.
Dahl (1993) noted that one cannot legislate attitude change. While the
media can be a vehicle that reinforces existing prejudice and
discrimination towards people with disabilities, it also has the
potential to bring about positive change in public perceptions and
positively influence attitudes, beliefs, and misconceptions around
disability.
The idea to develop this book came from day-to-day informal
conversations, formal research and observing media material where people
with disability are portrayed differently from other people both in
Africa and throughout the world. It is these differences which this book
hopes to highlight and reshape towards people with disability where the
same media which previously reinforced their inequality can be used to
bring justice and equity to their lives.
/Disability and Media – African perspectives/will be published by
reputable publishers - Routledge have expressed interest in the project.
All chapters will be subject to a rigorous peer review process.
Areas of interest that chapters might address include
* Representation in media of disability and Africa
* Different types of media and disability
* Mobile media
* Case studies on particular countries
* Case studies from particular disability communities
* Technological issues in media and disability
* Media ethics and disability
* Benefits and challenges in media and disability
* Results of recent research in this field
* Philosophical approaches to disability and media
* Disability media studies in/and Africa
* Social Media and Disability Advocacy/voice
* Disability Agenda setting (UNCRPD and other international statues)
* Ableism in Media
* The medicalised body in the media
* The objectification of the disabled body in the media
* Disability and the media: historical perspectives
* (Dis)Empowerments of the disabled body
* Journalism and practices of othering the body
**
*Submission procedure:*
Potential authors are invited to submit chapter abstracts of no more
than 500 words, including a title, 4 to 6 keywords, and a brief bio, by
email to Mike Kent <(m.kent /at/ curtin.edu.au)> by 1 November. (Please
indicate in your proposal if you wish to use any visual material, and
how you have or will gain copyright clearance for visual material).
Authors will receive a response by 15 November 2019, with those
provisionally accepted due as chapters of approximately 6000 words
(including references) by 15 January 2020 for review. If you would like
any further information, please contact Mike or Tafadzwa
<(zvirevo12 /at/ gmail.com)>.
*About the editors:*
**
*Mike Kent*is an Associate Professor and Head of Department in the
Department of Internet Studies at Curtin University. Mike’s research
focus is on people with disabilities and their use of, and access to,
information communication technology and the Internet. His other area of
research interest is in higher education and particularly online
education, as well as online social networking platforms. /H/is book,
with Katie Ellis, /Disability and New Media /was published by Routledge
in 2011. He has also produced a number of edited collections. His recent
publications include /Manifestos for the Future of Critical Disability
Studies /and /Interdisciplinary Approaches to Disability: Looking
Towards the Future /edited with Katie Ellis, Rosemarie Garland-Thomson
and Rachel Robertson (Routledge, 2019), /Disability and Social Media:
Global perspectives /with Katie Ellis, (Routledge, 2017),/Massive Open
Online Courses and Higher Education: What went right, what went wrong
and where to now /with Rebecca Bennett (Routledge, 2017), and /Chinese
social media: Social, cultural and political implications /with Katie
Ellis and Jian Xu (Routledge, 2018). His forthcoming book projects
include /Gaming Disability: Disability perspectives on contemporary
video game /with Katie Ellis and Tama Leaver, and /The Routledge
International Handbook of Critical Disability Studies /with Katie Ellis
*Tafadzwa Rugoho*is a PhD Sociology candidate at Kwa Zulu Natal and a
lecturer at Great Zimbabwe University in the Department of Development
Studies. Tafadzwa holds an MSc Development, MSc Strategic Management and
a BSc Sociology. He has authored a variety of book chapters and journal
papers on disability issues as well as presenting papers at research
conferences in this area over the past five years. He has worked for a
variety of disability organisations for more than fifteen years.
Tafadzwa is disabled and he is a disability activist.**
---------------
The COMMLIST
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier. Please use it responsibly and wisely.
--
To subscribe or unsubscribe, please visit http://commlist.org/
--
Before sending a posting request, please always read the guidelines at http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
URL: http://nicocarpentier.net
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]