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[Commlist] CFP: Global queer fandoms of Asian media and celebrities
Mon Feb 08 17:03:23 GMT 2021
Call for submissions
*/FEMINIST MEDIA STUDIES /*
Commentary and Criticism
*21.6 Global queer fandoms of Asian media and celebrities *
Since the 2010s, K-pop music groups, Chinese, South Korean, and Thai TV
dramas, Japanese ACG (anime, cosplay, and gaming) cultures, and Hong
Kong, Taiwanese, and Singaporean films have continued to grow in
popularity on a trans-geocultural scale. With little doubt, global flows
of Asian entertainment media and pop culture have been paving the way
for a decentering of the Western-dominated global mediascape. Certainly,
due to the increasingly close and frequent collaborations between media
industries in diverse geolocales, the too-often essentialized notion of
“Asianness” and the problematic theoretical binarisms of East/West,
global/local, and center/periphery need urgent contestation. It is also
hard to ignore the central role played by androgynous personas,
homosocial and homoerotic narratives, and norm-defying performances in
the worldwide prominence of Asian media and celebrity cultures, as well
as their flourishing queer fan communities in inter-Asian and Anglophone
contexts.
This special Commentary and Criticism section aims to re-center Asia
within fan studies through a combined global feminist and queer lens. It
highlights the multivalent potential of queer in forming disruption and
alternation to established meanings, identities, and norms in global
media flows and fannish spaces devoted to Asian media and celebrities.
It thus invites contributions that bridge global media studies, Asian
pop culture studies, LGBTQ media and audience studies, and queer fan
studies to identify promises and problems rooted in or emerging from
transcultural, cross-linguistic, multi-ethnic, and (de-)globalist settings.
The following are some of the questions this special section considers:
How and why do queer sentiments, narratives, and images contribute to
the global impact of Asian media and celebrities and appeal to a global
fan community? In what ways do global queer fans of Asian media and
celebrities negotiate norms and ideals surrounding gender, sexuality,
class, ethnicity, nationality, and other sociocultural registers? What
roles do traditional values, shared cultural roots, or racial and
linguistic proximities play in the global popularity of Asian
entertainment? How have contemporary international economic-political
situations and local technological affordances complicated queer fans’
transcultural consumption, interpretation, and circulation of Asian pop
culture?
Short contributions of no more than 1500 words from a wide range of
disciplines and theoretical approaches are encouraged. The editor
especially welcomes entries concerning queer fandoms in inter-Asian
contexts and based in non-English-speaking locales and digital spaces.
Submissions may address, but are not limited to, topics such as:
·Ethno-nationalistic sentiments and racial conflicts in transcultural
queer fandoms of Asian media and celebrities
·The role of queerbaiting in expanding the global fandom of Asian
entertainment
·Asian pop cover dance involving cross-gender or cross-dressing performances
·Anglophone fandoms of Asian boys’ love (BL) or girls’ love (GL) media
·Cross-dressing, inter-ethnic anime, cosplay, and gaming(ACG) cultures
·Fan communities dedicated to Asian media and celebrities as global
LGBTQ spaces
·The role of social media in forming global queer fandoms of Asian pop
culture
·Fansubbing (fan subtitling/translation), fanvidding (fan video-making),
and fan gossiping practices for queer readings of Asian media and
celebrities
·Cross-cultural imaginations and stereotyping in queer fan productions
concerning Asian media and celebrities
The Commentary and Criticism section of /Feminist Media Studies/ aims to
publish brief (~1000 words), timely responses to current issues in
feminist media culture, for an international readership. Submissions may
pose a provocation, describe work in progress, or propose areas for
future study. We will also consider book and event reviews, as well as
contributions that depart from traditional academic formats. We
encourage all submissions to strategically mobilize critique to also
offer a productive contribution to both feminist politics and media
studies. Submissions must go beyond mere description in order to be
considered for publication in Commentary and Criticism.
*Please submit contributions by Thursday 1 April 2021, via email to
Jamie J. Zhao (**(jingjamiezhao /at/ gmail.com)**). *Questions and expressions
of interest can also be addressed to Dr. Zhao in advance of the deadline.
Please note that submissions for Commentary and Criticism will not be
correctly processed if submitted through via the /Feminist Media
Studies/ website, and should be emailed directly to Dr. Zhao using the
email address above.
Please be sure to follow the /Feminist Media Studies/ style and
referencing guides, which can be found here.
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