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[Commlist] Call for Papers – Makings Journal - Disruption
Wed Oct 13 13:21:14 GMT 2021
*Call for Papers – Makings Journal - Disruption*
(Please share this call with your postgraduates. The call can also be
viewed using this link:
https://makingsjournal.com/call-for-papers-disruption/
<https://makingsjournal.com/call-for-papers-disruption/>)
The editors of///Makings <https://makingsjournal.com/about-us/>///– an
open-access, peer-reviewed journal on *the cultural and creative
industries* – invite researchers at all stages, including PhD, MA, and
BA students, to submit 300-word abstracts for the journal’s next issue,
themed *“Disruption”*.
*Please submit your abstracts (with bios) to the editors:*
Kateryna Sivak (kateryna.sivak /at/ mail.bcu.ac.uk)
<mailto:(kateryna.sivak /at/ mail.bcu.ac.uk)>
Vincent Obia (vincent.obia /at/ mail.bcu.ac.uk)
<mailto:(vincent.obia /at/ mail.bcu.ac.uk)>
This year’s theme, it seems, best explains our collective experience
given the disturbing effects of the Covid-19 pandemic. Along with other
major disruptive changes – Brexit, the climate crisis, blockchain
economics, to name a few – it has had an immense influence on arguably
all areas of our life; and the cultural and creative industries (CCIs)
are not an exception (OECD, 2020; Casadei, 2021; Deloitte, 2021). CCIs
are known to be vulnerable with glaring features of precarious work
conditions, signs of systemic issues, which have been exposed by the
Covid-19 disruption (Comunian and England, 2020). As the pandemic eases,
there have been talks of the “new normal”, the suggestion being that
creative practitioners are to return to the pre-Covid state of
affairs defined by instability, vulnerability, and precarity. A
different way of viewing this is to see the present disruption as likely
to cause lasting and wide-ranging structural changes, with the potential
for more unsettling realities across creative sectors.
Cardinal amongst these changes is the use of digital technology, which
has largely been celebrated. We note, however, the need to critique the
nature, conditions, consequences, and power relations evident in the
shift to online and hybrid delivery of creative content. Even before the
pandemic, technology represented a major source of disruption within
CCIs. Cinema is an illustrative example here – the digital revolution
embodied by players such as Netflix has challenged the value chain
set-up and traditional means of operation in the sector (Salvador et
al., 2019). In this sense, disruption happens when a “new logic”
captures the core of an industry, presenting opportunities for some and
obstacles for others (Skog et al., 2018, p. 436).
It is important to emphasise that such disruptions are felt not only at
an industry or sector level but also by individual creative workers and
businesses. In this thematic issue, therefore, we would like to explore
the diverse “disrupted realities” of working within the creative, media,
and cultural industries both at the micro level (involving sole players
in the creative industries) and/or the
macro (involving organisations and supporting institutions). We invite
abstract proposals that critique disruption in the cultural and creative
industries, including in film, music, craft, fashion, theatre, cinema.
We are interested in a range of topics, including but not limited to:
* Disruption and the cultural and creative industries
* Pandemic disruption
* Disrupted past, present, and future
* The nature, conditions, and consequences of disruption
* The response of creative workers to disruption
* Creative labour, precarity, and disruption
* Climate disruption
* Technological/digital disruption in CCIs
We are also interested in conceptual reflections from traditional and
practice-based researchers on various ideas of and approaches to
disruption in the creative industries.
The topics we have highlighted are by no means exhaustive; and we
welcome any other proposals that deal with */disruption and the creative
industries/*.
The deadline for 300-word abstracts is *26 November 2021.* Along with
the abstract, please add a short bio, including your name, institution
(if appropriate) and contact email.
The decision on the abstracts will be communicated by *December*
*2021* and the full submissions (up to 6000 words) will be expected by
*March-April 2022. *All submissions will go through a double-blind
peer-review process.
Please check contributor guidelines
<http://makingsjournal.com/contributor-guidelines/> for more details.
Alongside journal articles, we also welcome shorter think-pieces,
observations, and experimental works up to 500-1000 words or in the form
of write-ups, podcasts, videos, images etc., which will be published in
the /Studio/ <https://makingsjournal.com/studio/>//section of the
journal/./ If you are interested, please send across an abstract and bio
as normal indicating a preferred format of your proposed contribution.
*Please submit your abstracts (with bios) or any questions you have to
the editors:*
Kateryna Sivak (kateryna.sivak /at/ mail.bcu.ac.uk)
<mailto:(kateryna.sivak /at/ mail.bcu.ac.uk)>
Vincent Obia (vincent.obia /at/ mail.bcu.ac.uk)
<mailto:(vincent.obia /at/ mail.bcu.ac.uk)>
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