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[Commlist] cfp: Book collection: Essays on Police and Policing in 21st Century Film and Television
Mon Oct 04 12:51:25 GMT 2021
CALL FOR PAPERS: Essays on Police and Policing in 21st Century Film and
Television
The Black Lives Matter movement, the trial and conviction of Derek
Chauvin, calls to defund the police, and the prominence in the media of
killer police such as Joseph James DeAngelo are recent manifestations of
intense and even unprecedented levels of media attention on policing at
interlocking points of race, inequality, social justice and political
agendas. Equally, exciting cross-disciplinary engagement between fields
of justice studies, criminology, cultural studies and popular culture
are increasingly opening up.
Police have been the inspiration for and focus of countless film and
television stories, a long-standing dramatic strain that is a fictional
backdrop to the intense recent public scrutiny, and at times rejection
of policing. Perceptions of the police are shaped by these long standing
narrative forms of film and television that can also convey other
shapers of perception, from bodycam footage to mobile phone recordings.
At this point of exceptional pressure on police conduct and the
uncertain paths that policing will take in the 21^st century, this
collection is intended to be a topical opportunity to examine the themes
of how police and policing are perceived and portrayed and these points
are intended as the focal point for each contribution.
We are assembling a special collection of essays that consider
addressing the intersection of police and policing with film and
television in the 21^st century. Possible areas include:
Genre studies and the procedural
Representations of race
Real and fictional police
Reality television
Televising trials
Police in pornographic films
Representations of police both historical and modern
Policing in dystopias
Moral and political authority
Contributions related to the United States are especially welcomed.
*/Advice for contributors/*
This edited collection is under contract.
If you are interested in contributing to this collection, we ask that
you submit an abstract of up to 250 words explaining the focus and
approach your proposed essay. The proposed volume is intended to be
scholarly and will be peer reviewed but accessible in tone and approach.
Each final contribution should be around 6000 words.
Abstracts should be emailed to (marcus.harmes /at/ usq.edu.au)
<mailto:(marcus.harmes /at/ usq.edu.au)>
*Abstract submission deadline: October 15, 2021*
*Full paper submission deadline: March 1, 2022*
*/About the editors/*
*Associate Professor Marcus K Harmes* has published extensively in the
field of popular culture. His most recent publications include /Roger
Delgado: I am usually referred to as the Master /(Fantom Publishing
2017) and /Doctor Who and the Art of Adaptation /(Rowman and
Littlefield, 2015). He is the author of numerous studies on the church
in modern popular culture, including book chapters in the collection
/Doctor Who and Race/, and articles in journals including /Science
Fiction Film and Television/, and /Journal of Religion and Popular
Culture/. In 2018 he edited the Handbook for Springer on /Postgraduate
Education in Higher Education/.
*Meredith A Harmes* teaches communication in the enabling programs at
the University of Southern Queensland in Australia. Her research
interests include modern British and Australian politics and popular
culture in Britain and America. Her most recent publication in the
/Australasian Journal of Popular Culture /was on race and cultural
studies on American television. She holds an honours degree from the
University of Queensland in political science and a Graduate Diploma of
Journalism and a Masters of Public Relations from the University of
Southern Queensland. She is co-editor of /Postgraduate Education in
Higher Education /(Springer, 2018).//
*Dr Barbara Harmes* lectures in communication at the University of
Southern Queensland, with a particular focus on international students.
Her doctoral research focussed on the discursive controls built around
sexuality in late-nineteenth-century England. Her research interests
include cultural studies, postgraduate education and religion. She has
published in areas including modern Australian politics, postgraduate
education, 1960s American television and her original field of Victorian
literature.
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