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[Commlist] CFP: Alphaville Special Issue – 100 Years of Disney
Wed Jul 19 18:21:09 GMT 2023
CFP: Alphaville Special Issue – 100 Years of Disney
In celebration of the Disney Company’s 100th anniversary on 16 October
2023, Alphaville is announcing a Call for Papers for a special issue
dedicated to examining what a century of Disney entertainment means.
This issue intends to look at how Disney has evolved, what the current
debates are around it (i.e. how the “live action” remakes are being used
to address past issues of gender, race, and class), how its different
facets – live-action and animated shorts and features, merchandising,
theme parks, television (to name the major ones) – function as parts of
a whole, and how Walt Disney’s persona is still interwoven throughout
this despite his having been dead for more than half the company’s
history. As an organising theme for the issue (since “100 Years of
Disney” is impossibly broad), the task for the papers is to think about
their chosen focus in relation to how the tensions between Nostalgia/the
Past and Modernity/Futurism have manifested in Disney’s entertainment
outputs. After all, Disney’s integration of Nostalgia with Modernity has
played out within Disney in myriad ways throughout its history, going
all the way back to Walt’s Laugh-O-Grams studio (1921-23) and its “Jazz
Age Fables”.
Likewise, the themes that are central to this examination of Disney are
also about how Disney is building its future based upon its past. After
all, this is a company that has itself always focused on combining the
past (via ideas of “nostalgia”) and the future as a way to address its
audience. Usually, these tensions have come about via the interplay
between its use of the latest technologies to tell ancient/timeless
stories. It has also tended to present the possibilities of the future
via optimistic visions of technological promise. This tension between
Nostalgia/the Past and Modernity/Futurism is central when looking not
only at Disney as an organisation, but also at how Disney itself is
celebrating/commemorating its 100th anniversary. It is hoped that, by
assembling a collection of papers which look at different aspects of
Disney in relation to the issue’s guiding theme, a more nuanced
understanding of what Disney is, how it has evolved, and how it has
contributed to Western popular culture, will be achieved.
Though some papers have already been selected, others to fill in the
gaps are now being sought. These gaps can be filled by looking at some
aspect of one of the following topics:
- Walt and Roy Disney – the foundations and relationship between the
brothers who founded the company; growing the business, as well as their
legacy (individually and jointly)
- Disney Animation – the development of the studio and its relationship
with Pixar Animation; the impact of Disney on the animation industry
- The Disney Theme Parks – from creating the concept of the theme park
(as opposed to amusement park or fairground) to the way that the theme
parks have supported the company in myriad ways, from income to
synergistic links
- Imagineering: Before and Beyond – the significance of technology
throughout Disney’s history, which intersects the parks, studio content,
and marketing
- The Disney Brand – globally recognised and significant in terms of
fandom, quality, and brand identification
- Consumer Products and Merchandise – this has been used by Disney for
most of its history to communicate itself directly to its fanbase, and
has been used throughout this time not only to generate income and offer
an emotional connection for customers/fans but also (in the words of Roy
Disney in 1931) to keep audiences “Mickey Mouse Minded”
- The Business of Disney – a history of acquisitions and its approach to
doing business, past and/or present
We will of course be open to receiving abstracts on topics beyond those
listed here, particularly those that engage with the expansion and
development of an aspect of the Disney Company.
If you are interested in contributing to this special issue, please send
a 300-word abstract, 3–5 keywords, and a short biography by 15 September
2023 to (a.davis /at/ hull.ac.uk).
Authors will be notified of decision by 6 October 2023. Following
acceptance, authors will be required to submit their completed articles
of between 5,500 and 7,000 words in length that fully adhere to
Alphaville Guidelines, MLA and House Style by 5 January 2024. Articles
will undergo peer-review.
Alphaville: Journal of Film and Screen Media
https://doi.org/10.33178/alpha
Please note that Alphaville is a diamond open access peer-reviewed
journal. No payment from the authors will be required.
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