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[Commlist] CFP - The Women of IMAX - Feminist Media Histories
Thu Jul 18 16:05:38 GMT 2024
Call For Papers
/Feminist Media Histories: An International Journal/
**
*Special Issue on the Women of IMAX*
Guest Editors: Jessica Mulvogue and Allison Whitney
https://online.ucpress.edu/fmh/pages/cfp
<https://online.ucpress.edu/fmh/pages/cfp>
In 2022 the International Union of Cinemas named IMAX Corporation as
sponsor of their Womens’ Cinema Leadership Programme, tasked with
addressing pay disparities among cinema operators. While this form of
industrial recognition, and the goals it represents, might seem like the
most modest of feminist endeavors, it points to a deeper history of
women’s technical, creative, and emotional labor that has created and
maintained the largest film format in history. IMAX is a corporate
entity, but it is also an array of film production and exhibition
systems and spaces, and it has produced an extensive giant-screen
filmography. Not only is IMAX a relatively under-studied phenomenon, but
the origins of the format in experimental and documentary practice,
state-sponsored filmmaking institutions, and World’s Fairs allowed for
women to have unusually prominent roles in its conceptualization and
proliferation. Further, unique structures of the industry, such as the
rare power of largely museum-based exhibition venues, often directed by
women, as well as the prominence of filmmaking families with all of the
gendered dynamics therein, invite the particular analytic frameworks
offered by feminist historiography. Althea Douglas, Phyllis Ferguson,
Diane Carlson, Sally Dundas, Toni Myers, Emma Thomas, Diane Roberts, and
Zaha Hadid are among the many women who played crucial roles in the
development, production, distribution, and exhibition of IMAX cinema.
This issue of FMH will illuminate the intersections of women’s labor in
industrial processes, professional organizations, and screen cultures.
We welcome pieces that locate IMAX within lineages of women’s work and
gendered discourses in immersive media, production and exhibition
technologies, educational film, audience and reception studies, industry
studies, and more. While article topics may address the careers of women
directors and producers, we will also transcend auteurist frameworks in
favor of a more holistic view. We are especially interested in global
and transnational perspectives, and we welcome scholars from every
sub-field of media studies to contribute. As IMAX and other giant-screen
exhibition systems become increasingly prominent in the global film
industry, we believe it is important to foreground women’s key positions
in IMAX’s history, such that critical frameworks grounded in
intersectional feminist historiography can better inform future
scholarship in this growing field.
Potential topics include but are not limited to:
- Profiles of women filmmakers, with a broad understanding of the work
of making films
- Gender analysis of IMAX audiences
- Sound studies, including Voice-Overs, IMAX acoustics, and more
- Women and IMAX cinema architecture
- Gender and reception of IMAX films
- Women theater managers and technicians
- Commentaries on gender in specific IMAX films and/or categories of
documentary
- Women and IMAX as educational cinema
- Women’s contributions to IMAX experiments at World’s Fairs and Expos
- Animation and IMAX
In addition to standard essays of 7000-8000 words, we are interested in
photo and video essays, roundtables, oral histories, and other
alternative forms of media scholarship. We encourage prospective
contributors to contact the editors with ideas for this volume, and to
discuss topics before proposal submission.
Proposals should be roughly 300 words, include a short bio, and be
submitted no later than *September 30, 2024* to Allison Whitney
((allison.whitney /at/ ttu.edu) <mailto:(allison.whitney /at/ ttu.edu)>) and Jessica
Mulvogue ((jsm38 /at/ st-andrews.ac.uk) <mailto:(jsm38 /at/ st-andrews.ac.uk)>).
Contributors will be notified by *October 15, 2024*; article drafts will
be due *January 15, 2025 *and then will be sent out for anonymous peer
review. There are no submission or author fees involved in this publication.
/Feminist Media Histories/ publishes original research, oral histories,
primary documents, conference reports, and archival news on radio,
television, film, video, digital technologies, and other media across a
range of historical periods and global contexts. Inter-medial and
trans-national in its approach, Feminist Media Histories examines the
historical role gender and sexuality have played in varied media
technologies, and documents the engagement of women and LGBTQ
communities with these media as audiences, users and consumers, creators
and executives, critics, writers and theorists, technicians and
laborers, educators, activists, and librarians. Feminist Media Histories
is published quarterly by the University of California Press. More
information is available here: online.ucpress.edu/fmh
<http://online.ucpress.edu/fmh>.
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