Archive for publications, January 2022

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[Commlist] Radiofonias – Journal of Audio Media Studies' new issue, CfAs

Sat Jan 15 22:20:56 GMT 2022





We are pleased to inform you that issue 2021.3 of Radiofonias – Journal of Audio Media Studies is online: https://periodicos.ufop.br/radiofonias/issue/view/310 <https://periodicos.ufop.br/radiofonias/issue/view/310>

Calls for articles are now open, with two thematic dossiers.

Issue 2022.1 – “Radio and gender”. Deadline for submissions: March 21;

Issue 2022.2 – “Radiojournalism and electoral coverage”. Deadline for submissions: July 4th;

Issue 2022.3 – Free themes. Continuous flow.

Radiofonias is a free access journal with no actual publication costs, which accepts submissions in Portuguese, Spanish and English, authored or co-authored by doctors. Guidelines for authors can be found at: https://periodicos.ufop.br/radiofonias/about/submissions

It is a quarterly co-edition between the Graduate Program in Communication at the Federal University of Ouro Preto (UFOP), the Convergence and Journalism Research Group (ConJor) and the University Federal of Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ) Radio and TV Nucleus (NRTV), with support from the Radio and Audio Media Research Group of the Brazilian Society for Interdisciplinary Studies in Communication (Intercom).

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Issue 2021.3 / Table of contents:

PRESENTATION
Desafios aos estudos radiofônicos
Lena Benzecry

FREE THEME ARTICLES
A inserção dos estudos radiofônicos e de mídia sonora na pós-graduação em Comunicação no Brasil Marcelo Kischinhevsky, Debora Cristina Lopez, Izani Mustafá, Marcelo Freire, Patrícia Consciente, Leonardo Lopes do Couto

O aplicativo de rádio como uma (nova) experiência midiatizada de escuta
Daniel Gambaro

A filosofia de programação musical do algoritmo
Gustavo Ferreira

As gravadoras brasileiras voltadas ao gênero da dance music na década de 1990
Johan van Haandel

Estudo de caso sobre as emissoras estatais de rádio brasileiras
Ivana De Mingo, Edgard Rebouças

O “Programa do Galinho” na Rádio Educadora do Maranhão
José Ferreira Junior, Gutemberg de Sousa Feitosa, Ramon Bezerra Costa

Utilidade pública do rádio nas plataformas digitais: estudo de caso de web rádios em Campo Grande (MS)
Daniela Cristiane Ota, Aline de Oliveira Silva

A memória dos grandes magazines: um estudo de caso a partir da análise de mensagens de ouvintes da CBN Curitiba
Maíra Rossin Gioia de Brito, Juliana Messias Goss, José Carlos Fernandes

INTERVIEW (português / español)
Ivanova Nieto Nasputh: O rádio universitário como motor dos debates sociais
Ivanova Nieto Nasputh: La radio universitaria como motor de debates sociales
Debora Cristina Lopez, Marcelo Kischinhevsky, Lena Benzecry

REVIEW
Muito além do manual: uma contribuição teórico-prática ao planejamento e à produção de roteiros radiojornalísticos
Galvão Júnior

Best regards,
Debora Cristina Lopez, Marcelo Kischinhevsky and Lena Benzecry – editors

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CfA – Issue 2022.1 – “Radio and gender”

Although they represent the majority of the Brazilian population, women are a minority in journalism. According to data from Workr, the corporate communication platform of the Comunique-se portal, 15,654 women were employed in media in 2019, equivalent to 36.98% of jobs in the national press market. In radio, however, female participation was even lower: only 2,284 women (20.5% of the total) worked in journalistic roles, such as reporter, presenter and editor-in-chief, against 11,182 men. This is a sample of the deep gender inequality that historically characterizes radio in Brazil, where the male voice prevails.

This scenario began to change in the 1970s, with pioneering initiatives such as Rádio Mulher (SP), and more recently with changes in the management of public and private broadcasters, increasingly attentive to discussions around gender equity. But even today, in most cases, productive routines marked by sexist and misogynist practices prevail, often with explicit situations of moral and sexual harassment. An environment permeated by toxic masculinity, in which the voice of women and people of non-binary sexuality is still barely heard, often reiterating stereotypes.

Understanding that the diversity of genres is key for a representative and plural radio, committed to equity, Radiofonias – Journal of Audio Media Studies launches the dossier “Radio and gender”, in which it encourages submissions that propose theoretical reflections, case studies and/or arise from research projects involving issues such as:

• Representations of genres on the radio;
• Sexism, misogyny and homophobia in sound broadcasting;
• Who speaks on the radio: credibility and speech;
• Pathfinders: history and memory of pioneers who managed to make female or LGBTQIA+ voices heard on the radio; • Public policies and management experiences in search of gender equity in radio.

Deadline for submissions: March 21, 2022

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CfA – Issue 2022.2 – Dossier “Radiojournalism and electoral coverage”

Appointed in several researches as the most credible medium, radio has been facing difficulties to preserve its symbolic capital in a scenario of economic fragility and growing political radicalization. Traditional broadcasters articulate with local, regional and national party interests, compromising the balance of journalistic coverage in favor of some candidates, to the detriment of others. In a context of wide circulation of disinformation campaigns, which characterized the last elections in Brazil and internationally, the debate on major issues of society ends up being overshadowed, if not interdicted.

AM/FM radio also faces competition from new players in the informational audio market, with the rise of independent podcasts, with news and/or interviews, which vie for the audience's attention. Not to mention an entire ecosystem of absolutely opaque audio, which includes groups of instant messaging applications, such as WhatsApp and Telegram, where both radio and hybrid content circulate, edited as part of campaign strategies – in general, a dirty war, in that lies are hurled at political opponents.

A few months before the beginning of the electoral period in Brazil, researchers are mobilizing around collective investigations, such as those developed by the Radiojournalism Research Network (RadioJor), linked to the Brazilian Association of Researchers in Journalism (SBPJor), to monitor electoral coverage offered by radio, understood as a public broadcasting service.

In this challenging context, Radiofonias – Journal of Audio Media Studies announces the dossier “Radiojournalism and electoral coverage”, encouraging submissions that propose reflections, case studies and/or stem from research projects involving issues such as:

• Quality in radio journalism concept and measurements;
• Balance in radio coverage of politics;
• Disinformation as a business model;
• Radio, politics and editorial line – organizational constraints;
• The sources of information in radio journalism during the electoral period; • New actors in audio journalism – the electoral role of podcasting, streaming and instant messaging apps in the circulation of news and political commentary; • New listening habits – conditions for the appropriation of political news in sound media by the audience in the context of expanded and hypermedia radio.

Deadline for submissions: July 4, 2022**


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