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[Commlist] TVLT "Media Awards: Beyond the EGOT" CFP
Sat Feb 06 10:30:20 GMT 2021
The Velvet Light Trap Issue #89, "Media Awards: Beyond the EGOT," has
extended its deadline! We will now be accepting submissions until
February 28th. If more time is needed beyond that, please email the
editors at (vltcfp /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(vltcfp /at/ gmail.com)>as soon as possible
to discuss.
The full CFP is below, and in the following pdf
<https://drive.google.com/file/d/1sG8ecgx95Qye2wjfnOINJFcKINgOULPw/view?usp=drivesdk>.
Please send submissions to (vltcfp /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(vltcfp /at/ gmail.com)>.
We understand the delays and frustrations inherent to working during a
pandemic, and will be as accommodating as possible to your requests. We
look forward to reading your work!
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
The Velvet Light Trap#89
Media Awards: Beyond the EGOT
The “big four” American entertainment awards—the Emmy for television,
the Grammy for music, the Oscar for film, and the Tony for theater,
often referred to by the “EGOT” acronym—have long served as a barometer
of mainstream taste cultures in their respective fields. While
literature on media awards is not completely absent, its scope has been
narrow. Popular press works on the somewhat standardized journalistic
narratives surrounding the EGOT, particularly the Oscars. Scholarly
literature has largely focused on awards as they pertain to the
international art cinema circuit and its attached film festivals, such
as the Cannes Film Festival. This call, while respecting the literature
that addresses these familiar narratives, intends to reimagine and
reinvigorate discussion of entertainment awards and their meaning within
the media industries.
Awards are a near-ubiquitous feature of media cultures across mediums,
narrative forms, industrial roles, and both geopolitical and virtual
spaces: The Nolly Awards, for the span of a few years, recognized
achievement in Nollywood films, i.e. the cinema of Nigeria; TikTok user
Ashley Hufford (@ashleyhufford) recently sought to establish the “Tik
Tok Tony Awards”; The Ursa Major Awards is awarded for “the furry arts.”
What purpose do these and other awards serve for their respective
communities, beyond the oft-stated objective of recognizing excellence?
In what cases do awards recognize achievement in areas beyond the media
text? In what aspects of the media industries are awards rarely given,
but excellence still expected? When is the stated purpose or ultimate
effect of an award something distinctly separate from excellence?
Furthermore, we are interested in the intersection of awards with
critical discourse on political, social, and identity-based issues.
Media award shows have long served as a locus for the discussion of
issues through sartorial statements, protests on and off the red carpet,
and political statements in acceptance speeches or other awards forums.
Recent conversations about inclusion and equity for marginalized
communities in nominations and organizational membership have served to
highlight the institutionalized bigotry of the media industries and
media cultures more generally. This advocacy has come from many
perspectives, both within those industries, from cultural intermediaries
in the fourth estate, and from vocal audience members. Such discussions
have been accompanied by some change, including the establishment of the
Academy Inclusion Standards in 2020, and the 2019 Tony for Best Musical
Revival going toOklahoma!, a production which transformed the
traditional work into an allegory for racism and intolerance in
contemporary America. It remains to be seen, however, whether these
gestures signal a larger, permanent shift towards equity, or whether
they will remain largely symbolic events. Media awards thus provide a
microcosm of larger representational concerns, one that can serve as a
rich point of study for scholarly inquiry.
The Velvet Light Trap#89 seeks to challenge and expand our understanding
of media awards so that we may better understand the media ecologies
that support such events. These awards bridge media criticism,
sociocultural issues, national and international politics, and cultures
of art and entertainment into discourses both in and outside of the
mainstream. We welcome submissions that push the boundaries of current
media awards literature, use media award contexts as key case studies,
or exploring any of the following themes:
● Reimagining our approach to or conception of major awards, ‘awards
seasons,’ and their attendant discourses, including the Oscars, Tonys,
Emmys, and Grammys
● Media awards outside North American and Anglophone contexts
● The various meanings of entertainment and media award shows in
relation to the local, national, and global contexts.
● Historical media awards (defunct or still ongoing), particularly
situated within sociocultural contexts
● Explorations of the various cultural intermediaries that enable and
coordinate the hubbub of “awards seasons,” including critics, culture
writers, and so on.
● Recognition of technical, below-the-line, organizational, or corporate
achievement
● Recognition of achievement for communities of color and marginalized
groups (e.g. NAACP Image Awards, the Unforgettable Gala)
● Recognition of achievement in marginalized groups (e.g. the GLAAD
Media Awards, the Mental Health Media Awards, the Media Access Awards)
● Recognition of achievement in media subcultures, communities, or
genres (e.g. the Ursa Major Awards, the Saturn Awards, the r/Aww Awards)
● Recognition of achievement in pornography (e.g. the PornHub Awards,
the GayVN Awards)
● Recognition of social media and digital content achievement (e.g. the
American Influencer Awards, the Webby Awards, the Streamy Awards, the
Shorty Awards)
● Recognition of achievement in video games (e.g. the Game Awards, the
Game Critics Awards)
● Recognition of achievement in comics and animation (e.g. the Annie
Awards, the Eisner Awards)
● Recognition of achievement in understudied, under-recognized or niche
media types
● Intentionally subversive media-related awards (e.g. the Razzies)
● Recognition of achievement in relation to conventions and/or
fandom-specific contexts
● Controversies related to a specific media-related award, award show,
or win/loss
Submission Guidelines
Submissions should be between 6,000 and 7,500 words, formatted in
Chicago Style. Please
submit an electronic copy of the paper along with a separate one-page
abstract, both saved as Microsoft Word files. Remove any identifying
information so that the submission is suitable for anonymous review.
Quotations not in English should be accompanied by translations. Please
send your submissions to (vltcfp /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(vltcfp /at/ gmail.com)>by
February 28th, 2021. If additional time is necessary, please email us to
discuss.
About the Journal
TVLT is a scholarly, peer-reviewed journal of film, television, and new
media. The journal draw on a variety of theoretical and
historiographical approaches from the humanities and social sciences and
welcomes any effort that will help foster the ongoing processes of
evaluation and negotiation in media history and criticism. While TVLT
maintains its traditional commitment to the study of American film, it
also expands its scope to television and other media, to adjacent
institutions, and to other nations' media. The journal encourages both
approaches and objects of study that have been neglected or excluded in
past scholarship.
Graduate students at the University of Wisconsin at Madison and the
University of Texas at Austin coordinate issues in alternation, and each
issue is devoted to a particular theme. TVLT's Editorial Advisory Board
includes such notable scholars as Ben Aslinger, Caitlin Benson-Allott,
Lauren S. Berliner, Dolores Inés Casillas, Aymar Jean Christian, Lisa
Dombrowski, Raquel Gates, Dan Herbert, Deborah Jaramillo, Lori Morimoto,
Meenasarani (Linde) Murugan, Safia Noble, Bob Rehak, Debra Ramsay,
Bonnie Ruberg, Avi Santo, Samantha Noelle Sheppard, Dan Streible, Neil
Verma, and Alyx Vesey. TVLT's graduate student editors are assisted by
their local faculty advisors: Mary Beltrán, Ben Brewster, Jonathan Gray,
Lea Jacobs, Derek Johnson, Shanti Kumar, Charles Ramírez Berg, Thomas
Schatz, and Janet Staiger (emeritus).
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