Archive for calls, February 2021

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[Commlist] CFP: Special Issue - “Popular Communication in Lockdown: Production, Distribution and Reception in the Age of COVID19”

Thu Feb 25 03:49:59 GMT 2021




“Popular Communication in Lockdown: Production, Distribution and Reception in the Age of COVID19”

Call for Papers for a Special Issue of Popular Communication: The International Journal of Media and Culture.

Papers addressing the impact of COVID-19 on the production, distribution, exhibition and/or consumption of popular communication (from a variety of methodological and theoretical perspectives) are welcome. And, research on countries and regions traditionally overlooked by academic publications are especially welcome.

Guest Editors for the special issue will invite full-length papers (not to exceed 7,000 words) for peer-review. No payment from authors is required for publication.

Deadlines
Submission of Extended Abstracts: 15 March, 2021 (max 1,000 words)
Notification of Decision: 15 April, 2021
Submission of final drafts: 1 September, 2021
Anticipated publication date: January 2022

Special Issue Editors
Christian Christensen (Stockholm University, Sweden)
Patrick Burkart (Texas A&M University, USA)

The COVID19 pandemic has altered the production, exhibition and consumption of varying forms of media, and varying forms of popular communication. From TikTok and “Netflix binging” while in lockdown, to the re-discovery of drive-in movies, to socially-distanced comedy programming such as Saturday Night Live and The Daily Show, to the re-imagination of political communication in the form of the 2020 Democratic and Republican national conventions in the U.S., COVID19 has forced niche and mass communication to handle a reduction of mobility. For example, the rise of Streaming Video on Demand has led to a shift in the traditional “windowing strategies” utilized by the television industry, and advertisers are spending more on off-cable platforms like Netflix, TikTok, and Spotify. The double shocks to public health and the world economy have occurred as restrictions on cinemas, live concerts, sports games, theater and other live, in-person events have positioned subscription television and social media apps favorably for reaching large audiences. Meanwhile, “captive” consumers stuck at home present a new source of demand for increasingly scarce audio-visual productions, many of which have been halted.

Please send abstracts to (popularcommunication /at/ tamu.edu) and please cc: Christian Christensen ((christian.christensen /at/ ims.su.se)).


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