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[Commlist] Call for visual essays: Special Edition of Digital Culture and Education on 'Shelfies'
Thu Nov 26 10:13:05 GMT 2020
SPECIAL EDITION - VISUALISING THE SHELFIE MOVEMENT: DOCUMENTING DIGITAL
MATERIALITIES
Edited by Yasemine Allsop, Natalia Kucirkova, Jennifer Rowsell,
Ekaterina Rzyankina, and Sumin Zhao
Covid-19 has transformed the way we work. With domestic space now
positioned up front and centre in daily working life, the humble home
bookshelf has been transformed into a professional platform. Heightened
online time has invited novel habits and trends such as taking, sharing
and appreciating shelfies. This special issue invites visual essays on
ideologies, ontologies, and epistemologies circulating in shelfies
within formal and informal contexts.
Shelfies throw into relief ways of being, thinking, and valuing (or not)
spaces. What objects are foregrounded and backgrounded in shelfies? What
is visible and invisible? In what ways are shelfies political,
affective, hermeneutic, and contested?
Visual responses to the shelfie movement have the potential of opening
up a new lens for conducting and interpreting research. In addition,
visual articles give (more) room to present and theorise people’s
relationships with the liminal spaces we move in and out of during and
post-COVID.
We invite visual essays that explore responses to shelfies as both trend
and lived practice. Some ideas for possible topics include: The form and
function of shelfies; Shelfies as cultural, social, and economic
signifiers; The semiotics of shelfies; Shelfies as affect; Shelfies as
posthuman; Shelfies and the home-work dichotomy; Shelfies as liminal
spaces; The politics of shelfies; Shelfies and social media; Shelfies
and wellbeing; Shelfies and identity; The presentation of the shelf in
everyday life; The shelf life of shelfies; Blurring, editing, and
augmenting shelfies; The curation of shelfies; Online and offline
shelfies; and, The post-COVID legacy of shelfies.
While theoretical perspectives and methodological approaches continue to
diversify in these new normal times, we invite scholars to use visuals
and words in combination in order to unpack the multimodal dynamism of
the shelfie.
For this call, we ask that you submit your abstract to
(Jennifer.Rowsell /at/ bristol.ac.uk) by January 15th, 2021. We will send out
decisions by March 1, 2021. Remember that these are visual articles, so
you will need to account for both written text and how you will design
your articles visually.
TIMELINES December 2020 – Put out call for abstracts
March 2021 – Decide on abstracts and send out invitations
June 2021 – Due date for visual essays
September 2021 – Due date for reviews
November 2021 – Final visual articles complete
December 2021 – Editorial written
January 2022 – Go live with special issue
For more information about Digital Culture and Education, please visit
www.digitalcultureandeducation.com, or read our latest editions at
www.digitalcultureandeducation.com/browse-journal
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