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[Commlist] Academic Quarter - Call for contributions: Volume 29, Fall 2024 “Gender Equality Training through Serial Drama”
Sun Nov 19 12:59:47 GMT 2023
Academic Quarter
Call for contributions Volume 29, Fall 2024
“Gender Equality Training through Serial Drama”
Guest Editors
Maria Elena D’Amelio, University of the Republic of San Marino
Sarah Arnold, Maynooth University, Ireland
Louise Brix Jacobsen, Aalborg University, Denmark
Raluca-Nicoleta Radu, University of Bucharest, Romania
Kim Toft Hansen, Aalborg University, Denmark
We invite submissions for a special issue about “Gender Equality
Training through Serial Drama”. The issue aims to explore the academic
intersection between gender equality as a sociological issue, popular
serial drama as a media phenomenon, and young adult education and
teaching. Aiming towards an interdisciplinary approach, we welcome
contributions that especially tackle gender equality issues through
teaching serial drama, including scholars with relations to sociology
and history, television and media studies, education and pedagogy, and
philosophy, and scholars working on critical media literacy.
The EU Gender Equality Strategy 2020-25 pays particular attention to the
necessity of negotiating and dissolving gender stereotypes that may
contribute to gender inequalities through unconscious biases, a process
sometimes referred to as ‘gender mainstreaming’. Especially through
gender mainstreaming in education, we wish to present perspectives that
address European young adults and young adults in high schools, offering
tools that negotiate and transform gender stereotypes and gender
equality issues. Through popular culture and especially serial drama, we
wish to motivate a common language for creating new modes of
self-representation and depiction of worldviews and social
relationships. Indeed, one key aspect of research in the field critical
media literacy is its concern for the politics of representation, which
focuses on how the marginalized and dominant relations, including
gender, race, class and sexuality, are represented in the media. We
welcome contributions that use popular serial drama as an ‘awareness
tool’ for new pedagogical reflections about social relations between
genders and on social justice issues regarding gender equality.
With this issue, we wish to represent scholarly perspectives that reply
to these four basic questions and orientations:
• Representation: How do European serial drama represent gender, gender
equality, and gender issues?
• Audience: How may we map European young adults’ understanding of
gender issues through serial drama?
• Production: How do creatives reveal debates about gender issues in
developing serial drama?
• Education: How may we use research into the above three perspectives
in developing educational tools for teaching gender equality to European
young adults?
Covering all four questions in one contribution is not a prerequisite
but abstracts for publications that cover more than one will be
favoured. All contributions should consider educational or pedagogical
perspectives on teaching gender issues through serial drama.
This special issue is developed in collaboration with the EU research
project GEMINI (Gender Equality through Media Investigation and New
training Insights) (Agreement No. 101088073). GEMINI is a
research-action project addressed to high school students and their
teachers. To encourage behavioural changes, we welcome contributions for
this issue that reply to the research questions presented above, but we
would especially urge researchers to present their material in a form
that may work both as research publications and as contributions that
may be integrated in a teaching context. This may include material that
can be used in teaching activities, or material that pedagogically
reflects on or introduces how teachers may use serial drama cases in
teaching gender issues to European high school students.
Academic Quarter is a multimodal research journal, including video
essays as a publication mode. The editors’ ambition is to present an
issue in which most contributions are video essays, but we will also
include articles in text. However, as the topic is serial drama, and
since material should be easily adapted by teachers, we invite
contributors to enrich their contributions through visualisation, clear
exemplification, or audiovisual means. For authors, this presents an
opportunity to reflect on serial drama as visual educational tools for
teaching gender issues to young adults in European schools. In your
abstract, please indicate how you wish to audiovisually present your
material.
According to the European Institute for Gender Equality, gender equality
training deals with the provision of “relevant knowledge, skills and
values” that allow individuals and societies with the right tools “to
contribute to the effective implementation of the gender-mainstreaming
strategy in their field” (EIGE 2016). In our case, this means students
and teachers in European high schools as a core target group. The
theoretical assumption is that it is possible to teach gender equality
through popular serial drama to students, since it involves teaching
activities guided towards relevant media consumption among young adults.
In addition, this also involves a potential creation of young ‘gender
ambassadors’ by employing the dramatic potency build into serial drama
in gender equality training in schools.
• Submission and Review of Abstracts February 1, 2024
• Response to Authors of Abstracts: March 1, 2024
• Submission of Articles and Videos for Peer Review: June 15, 2024
• Peer Reviews sent to Authors: August 30, 2024
• Resubmission of Articles and Videos following Peer Review: October 1, 2024
• Layout Copyedit: December 1, 2024
• Publication: January 15, 2025
Practical Information
Abstract: c. 150 words.
Full Article: c. 3,000 – 3,500 words
Video essay: Max 7–12 minutes. While shorter pieces are welcome, it may
be appropriate to batch more than one as part of a specific submission.
Abstracts and articles should be sent to: Annemette Helligsø
(mailto:(anhe /at/ ikl.aau.dk)) No payment from the authors will be required.
Detailed author guidelines and further information can be found on the
journal’s website: https://journals.aau.dk/index.php/ak.
Video essays
You are welcome to use the possibility of producing a video essay
following these guidelines:
To ensure blind peer review of video essays, contributors should – to
the greatest extent possible – ensure that their identity is
unidentifiable. The video files for review should not include
information on authors, directors, producers, and performers. You do not
need to mask the voices or images of people.
Video essays should be max. 7-12 minutes long and accompanied by an
academic guiding text between 1,000-1,500 words that clearly reflects
upon the publication’s scholarly/academic contribution. Video essays
should be original works of publishable quality in a rigorous scholarly
context, and may take argumentative, expository, explanatory,
documentary, performative, essayistic, poetic, symbolic (metaphorical)
or artistic forms, or a combination of these. The guiding text should
clearly explain the argument in the video essay and/or the insight that
the viewer may gain from watching and listening to it.
This guiding text should follow the directions in the article style
sheet of Academic Quarter. Video essays should be final and handed in as
a separate mp4-video-file. Video files and accompanying guiding text
should be sent to Annemette Helligsø by a large-file transfer service.
Academic Quarter hosts a video file server and archive at Aalborg
University from which the finished and published video files will be
streamed. Academic Quarter supports only publication and not the
technical development of video essays.
Video essays and the guiding text will be reviewed together.
Criteria for reviewing submissions are:
a. the lucidity (cogency) of the argument,
b. the technical and stylistic execution of the video material and
c. the clarity of the guiding text.
Official information about the research project
This project has received funding from the European Union (CERV
Programme) under Grant Agreement No. 101088073. In line with the EU
Gender Equality Strategy 2020-2025 and from an intersectional
perspective, the research-action project GEMINI – Gender Equality
through Media Investigation and New training Insights aims to tackle
gender-based stereotypes that create gender inequalities and empower
young adults to create products that convey positive messages of gender
equality. The 10 partner institutions of GEMINI compose the Consortium
responsible for the implementation of the project as defined in the
contract with the European Commission. The Project Coordinator is Marica
Spalletta, Associate Professor in Media Sociology at Link Campus University.
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