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[Commlist] CfP: Tele-Archives. Reframing Archival Research on Local Televisions Across Europe
Thu Nov 07 08:42:51 GMT 2024
*Call for Papers: Cinergie. Il cinema e le altre arti no. 28*
*Tele-Archives. Reframing Archival Research on Local Televisions Across
Europe*
**
ed. by Giulia Crisanti (Sapienza Università di Roma), Myriam Mereu
(Università degli Studi di Cagliari), Emiliano Rossi (Università di
Bologna) and Paola Zeni (Università degli Studi di Torino)
***Proposals deadline: January 10, 2025***
Details here _https://site.unibo.it/atlas/en/publication
<https://site.unibo.it/atlas/en/publication>_ and here
_https://cinergie.unibo.it/announcement/view/660
<https://cinergie.unibo.it/announcement/view/660>_
***
This special issue of «Cinergie» − developed within the scope of the
PRIN 2020 research project ATLas - Atlante delle Televisioni Locali
(Atlas of Local Televisions, _https://site.unibo.it/atlas/en
<https://site.unibo.it/atlas/en>_) − intends to bring together a wide
variety of contributions on local broadcasting in Europe, with a
particular focus on the several ways in which archival research can
delve into the evolution of media systems in different contexts, as well
as investigate unexplored narratives in European television history. The
existing literature has largely relied on memorialist accounts to assess
the peculiarities of local TV stations. A thorough and systemic
historical inquiry of Europe’s commercial broadcasting is however still
lacking. The CFP consequently solicits contributions addressing the many
single stories of local broadcasters in relation to more general
interpretations of the progressive commercialization of European television.
Italy provides an interesting case study to address the evolution
undertaken during the 1980s by European televisions, but it also shows
the need for a transnational and/or comparative analysis. Between 1974
and 1976, a series of rulings issued by the National Constitutional
Court brought about a revolution in the country’s television landscape.
Together with the 1975 reform of national PSB Rai, the Court provisions
opened a new era in the history of Italian broadcasting, ending State’s
monopoly and leading the way towards the growth of Italian local and
private televisions. The ensuing commercialisation of Italian
broadcasting was however connected to and sustained by larger historical
transformations which cannot be confined within the nation’s
geographical or political borders: technological innovations in
broadcasting, increased market liberalisation, progressive segmentation
of consumer habits all contributed to transnationally challenge the
hitherto dominant European television paradigm, prompting a greater
influence of American commercial television models and programs, as well
as a variety of local and national responses. The eventual introduction,
in 1989, of the European directive known as “Television without
Frontiers” testifies to the strong relation between larger trends
impacting media landscapes all across the continent and the evolution of
European television broadcasting in the 1980s.
Since they represent one of the most valuable resources to study the
past, archives can be framed from a wide variety of interdisciplinary
perspectives, including comparative and cross-media scholarly points of
view. Lack of access to audiovisual repositories and documentary sources
referring to private TV stations has undermined a full understanding of
their role and legacy. Accordingly, the recurrent absence of
institutional databases demands a “patchwork” approach, fostering the
adoption of an inter-textual outlook connecting the experience of local
televisions with other media outlets such as newspapers, radio stations,
cinema, etc. Such an integration of sources entails new strategies to
collect, preserve and transmit audiovisual heritage, while providing
fruitful insights into the history of broader European socio-economic
and cultural developments throughout the 1980s.
Following the “archival turn” undertaken in film, media and television
studies, this special issue of «Cinergie» will gather contributions that
deal with − but are not strictly limited to − the following topics and
issues:
*the role of formal and informal TV and media archives in shaping
private and public memories, cultures and identities, especially in
Europe and with reference to different territorial scales (i.e.
transnational, national, regional, local);
*the rediscovery of hidden TV and media archives, including forgotten or
marginalised figures, stories, TV programmes, genres and schedules;
*the resort to audiovisual archive to shed light on TV production and
distribution patterns, with a special focus on industrial details;
*the integration, in addition to audiovisual records, of different
archival sources (i.e. sound recordings, images, scripts, interviews),
the role played by grey archives (i.e. those storing administrative
deeds and business data) and the enhancement of oral history practices
within academic research on local broadcasting;
*the technical, editorial and commercial structure of TV archives: data
treatment, sampling criteria, content hierarchies and discovery tools;
*academic, historical and public uses of archives: methodological and
theoretical standpoints, limits and problems of database access between
analogical and digital repositories;
*data circulation and dissemination strategies, with a special focus on
local TV and commercial broadcasting;
*the evolution and survival of media archives: policies, open science
practices, IP protection, alternative approaches towards the
revitalisation of cultural heritage.
*Please send a 300/500-word abstract and a short bio (50-100 words, in
English) to Giulia Crisanti and Paola Zeni at
giulia[dot]crisanti[at]uniroma1[dot]it and
paola[dot]zeni[at]unito[dot]it by January 10, 2025* – [subject: Cinergie
Application + name surname author(s)].
Notification of acceptance will be sent by January 31, 2025.
If the proposal is accepted, the author(s) will be asked to submit the
full article by May 20, 2025.
Articles (in English or Italian) must not exceed 6,000 words and may
include images, clips, and links for illustrative purposes. Please
provide proper credits, permissions, and copyright information to ensure
that images, clips, and links are copyright-free and can be published.
Contributions will undergo a double-blind peer-review.
Expected publication: December 2025.
«Cinergie» is an open-access journal and no publishing costs will be
charged to authors.
Please note that the 16th edition of Media Mutations international
conference - Unlocking Television Archives in the Digital Era
(_https://site.unibo.it/atlas/en/final-conference
<https://site.unibo.it/atlas/en/final-conference>_), to be held in
Bologna in May 26-27, 2025, will focus on some of the topics covered by
the issue; cross-applications are welcome.
-
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