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[Commlist] CfP Special issue on Transnational Journalism History
Mon Dec 23 19:34:48 GMT 2019
CfP Transnational journalism history
Special issue TMG - Journal for Media History <https://www.tmgonline.nl/>
Transnational journalism history acknowledges that cultural forms are
produced and exchanged across borders. It focuses on the interactions
between agents, ideas, innovations, norms and social and cultural
practices beyond national boundaries, as well as the way these
interactions affect the incorporation and adaption of new ideas,
concepts, and practices into national frameworks. By moving back and
forth between the national and transnational level, the connective and
dialectic nature of these movements is emphasized. It thus treats the
nation as only one level or context among a range of others, instead of
being the primary frame for analysis.
This special issue aims to critically interrogate and go beyond the
national frameworks within which historical developments of journalism
are generally studied. Due to its institutional organization and topical
focus, journalism historiography has traditionally been confined to
national boundaries. This holds true for studies restricted to the
development of journalism in one country, like most press histories, as
well as studies that take nations as units for comparative research.
Differences and, to a lesser extent, similarities in professional
practices and news coverage are usually discussed as autonomous
developments and ascribed to national peculiarities. The special issue
intends to bring together papers that open new venues for research that
move beyond this national boundary. We therefore invite articles related
to transnational journalism that (particularly, but not exclusively)
focus on:
* Theoretical and methodological reflections on transnational journalism
* Transnational journalistic networks
* Journalists or publishers who were influential “transfer agents”
* Transnational impact on journalistic genres
* Adaptation of foreign examples in a national context
* Case studies of transnational reporting
* Case studies that rely on Digital Humanities methods, for example,
text mining or network analysis
*Practical guidelines*
**We ask interested researchers to submit an abstract of max. 350 words
which clearly outlines a research question, relevance of the topic, a
theoretical/historical framework, justification of research material and
approach, and main argument.
Please send your proposals to the editors: Frank Harbers
((f.harbers /at/ rug.nl) <mailto:(f.harbers /at/ rug.nl)>) and Marcel Broersma
((m.j.broersma /at/ rug.nl) <mailto:(m.j.broersma /at/ rug.nl)>). Deadline: please
hand in your abstract no later than 15 January 2020. Authors will be
notified of acceptance by the end of January 2020.
*Tentative timeline*
**The authors of the accepted abstracts will be invited to contribute a
full article (max. 8000 words, excluding references and bibliography).
The deadline for the full papers is approximately 29 May 2020. It is
also possible to contribute a non-peer reviewed piece (between 4000 -
6000 words)
TMG - Journal for Media History is an open access peer reviewed academic
journal, published in the Netherlands. Its aim is to promote and publish
research in media history. It offers a platform for original research
and for contributions that reflect theory formation and methods within
media history. For more information and author guidelines, see:
https://www.tmgonline.nl/
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