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[ecrea] EUscreen releases open access 'Journal of European Television History and Culture'
Thu Mar 08 11:34:12 GMT 2012
*EUscreen releases open access /Journal of European Television History
and Culture/*
Hilversum, 08/03/2012 -
Today, the EUscreen project releases the first peer-reviewed,
multi-media and open access e-journal in the field of *European
television history and culture*. The aim of this e-journal is to provide
an international platform for outstanding research and reflection on
television as an important part of our European cultural heritage.
The Journal of European Television History and Culture
<http://journal.euscreen.eu/> builds on recent digitisation initiatives
in European archives and audiovisual libraries and addresses the need
for *critical study* of the cultural, social and political role of
television in Europe's past and presence with the help of television
material that has now become available at a large scale.
The first issue of the journal is a prototype, created in the open
access publishing platform Open Journal Systems
<http://pkp.sfu.ca/?q=ojs>. The second version, due to appear in
September 2012, will add important technical functionalities that will
turn it into a true multimedia platform for online storytelling.
The journal is the result of a cooperation between the EUscreen platform
and researchers from the European Television History Network
<http://cms.hum.uu.nl/ethn/> (ETHN), which was launched in 2004 to
promote a transnational perspective on the history and culture of
television in Europe. It is published by the Utrecht University Library
(Igitur publishing
<http://www.uu.nl/university/library/nl/igitur/Pages/default.aspx?refer=/igitur>)
in collaboration with Utrecht University, Maastricht University and
Royal Holloway College / University of London and will be continued with
funding from the Dutch National Research Board.
/The Journal of European Television History and Culture has the ambition
to speak to both the academic and the professional community but will
address a larger audience interested in television as a cultural
phenomenon, /says *Sonja de Leeuw*, EUscreen's project coordinator and
editor-in-chief of the journal.
/Broadcast historians, media studies scholars, audiovisual archivists,
television professionals as well as the large group of enthusiastic fans
of "old" television will have the opportunity to dive into the history
and presence of European television by means of multi-media texts./
Visit http://journal.euscreen.eu
<http://journal.euscreen.eu/> to dive into Vol 1, No 1 (2012):
Making Sense of Digital Sources
<http://journal.euscreen.eu/index.php/jethc/issue/view/138/showToc>
--
With kind regards (and possibly apologies for cross-posting),
*Erwin Verbruggen*
Project worker, R&D
**T* +31 35 - 677 1691 <tel:%2B31%2035%20-%20677%201691>*
**?M* +31 6 - 15 360 371 <tel:%2B31%206%20-%20%C2%A015%20360%20371>*
*IM* erwinverbruggen (skype)
http://www.euscreen.eu | http://blog.euscreen.eu
(info /at/ euscreen.eu) <mailto:(info /at/ euscreen.eu)> | *Twitter*: @euscreen
Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision
Media Park, Sumatralaan 45, Hilversum, NL
Postbus 1060, 1200 BB, Hilversum, NL
www.beeldengeluid.nl/research <http://www.beeldengeluid.nl/research>
www.beeldengeluid.nl/blogs/research-and-development
<http://www.beeldengeluid.nl/blogs/research-and-development>
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