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[Commlist] Cfp "Media, Society and Cycling Cultures" (Eracle. Journal of Sport and Social Sciences, Vol. 5/2022)
Thu Mar 10 10:04:44 GMT 2022
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Eracle. Journal of Sport and Social Sciences (ISSN 2611-6693)
Call for papers Vol. 5 (2022)
Media, Society, and Cycling Cultures
Editors: Paolo Landri & Mario Tirino
The Coronavirus emergency, the regime of social distancing have
revitalised the bicycle as a means of transport in urban and suburban
areas. The post-pandemic scenario also makes it possible to conceive of
the bicycle as a vector of transformation and social innovation, with
wider effects on cycling tourism and sport. The new post-Covid19
mobility needs are linked to the green transition framework, reflecting
the emerging Zeitgest towards sustainable mobility modes.
The interdisciplinary field of study ‘Cycling and Society’ represents a
part of mobility studies (Buscher, Urry, & Witchger, 2011). Cycling
studies (Urry, 2004) start from a critique of ‘automobility’, the
dominant paradigm of contemporary mobility. They try to outline post-car
mobility scenarios and focus on ‘velomobility’ (Horton, Rosen, & Cox,
2007; Cox, 2020) as a practice characterised by high historical,
anthropological, and cultural variability.
With the aim of contributing to this field of study, and notably to
understand the conditions for the spread of cycling as practice, this
call for papers invites articles focusing on the increasing
mediatization (Frandsen, 2019, Tirino, 2019) and platformization of the
experience of cycling. The long history of cycling is interlaced with
the development of media, as it is for many sports.
However, the availability of social media and digital platforms is
reshaping the experience of cycling as a practice and culture and there
is a need to map how it is happening and with what effects. By
considering cycling practice as mediated by technology, body, language,
and rules (Gherardi, 2010, 2012) we kindly invite you to send articles,
from various disciplinary approaches, addressing the following questions:
● To what extent, the current digitalization develops within the history
of the relationship between media and cycling? Are there continuities?
Or discontinuities?
● How the experience and practice of cycling is being reshaped by social
media narratives and usage (Facebook, Instagram, etc.) as a sport and as
an everyday activity?
● How do digital platforms (Strava, Komoot, etc) interlace with the
practice of cycling? How does it work?
● How do digital ecosystems give raise to the emergence of e-cycling? Is
it a new sport? Or not?
● What are the effects of datafication of cycling? Are they enabling
conditions for the spread of cycling? Are they enclosed in the
mechanisms of extractive capitalism of data?
● What are the methodological challenges to studying the relationship
between media, platforms, and cycling? Are we in need of digital native
methods to fully grasp this contemporary phenomenon?
● What are the connections between cycling, lifestyles, and subcultures
in the digital age? How are different modes of cycling experience being
told and remediated by social media and digital platforms?
● What forms does cycling fandom take in the digital media age? What
kind of relationships develop between professional cyclists and their
audiences?
● What role do media, platforms, and digital information resources play
in the relationship between local governments and cyclists? How do media
narratives contribute to the promotion and enhancement of a place
through cycling tourism?
● In the context of e-sports, do video games dedicated to cycling
promote or not a greater knowledge of the discipline and a stimulus to
practice? What are the relationships between videogames and
non-competitive cycling?
● What are the effects of the mediatization and platformization of
cycling on issues such as gender, environmental sustainability, social
inclusion, and migration?
Proposals can be written in English, Italian or Spanish and must be sent
to: (paolo.landri /at/ irpps.cnr.it) <mailto:(paolo.landri /at/ irpps.cnr.it)>;
(mtirino /at/ unisa.it) <mailto:(mtirino /at/ unisa.it)>.
Closing date for abstracts submission: March 20, 2022
Notification to the authors: March 31, 2022
Articles submission deadline: May 31, 2022
Articles assessment: June 30, 2022
Final version submission: until July 31, 2022
Publication: September, 2022
**
No payment from the authors will be required.
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