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March 2020, Week 4

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Subject:
From:
Aisha Villegas <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Film and TV Studies Discussion List <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Sat, 21 Mar 2020 11:22:02 +0100
Content-Type:
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*Apologies for cross-posting*



Dear all,



VIEW Journal of European Television History and Culture is currently open
for proposals for its next special issue on Race and Europe’s TV Histories,
set to be published in fall 2021.



Co-edited by Aniko Imre and Sudeep Dasgupta, this special issue will begin
the work of documenting and understanding the many ways in which television
has both perpetuated and critically interrogated racialized regimes in
Europe and in European countries’ ongoing relationships to their
postcolonial geopolitical spheres.  With this framework in mind, we welcome
proposals that explore how postwar television in Europe has naturalized,
confirmed and challenged racial categories and racialized relations in the
course of the medium’s history, including its extended, postcolonial
dimensions.

Those contributors engaging with issues of nation, region, ethnicity and
culture are encouraged to situate/emphasize/explore the relation with race
in their proposals.



Possible directions include:



   -

   Representing racialized histories and racial encounters in European
   broadcasting
   -

   The normalization of whiteness in and on European TV
   -

   Race in fictional and current affairs programming
   -

   Reality TV/ documentary programming’s engagement with multiculturalism
   and race
   -

   TV’s migration crisis
   -

   Sports programming and race
   -

   Race and multiculturalism in the history of advertising
   -

   Race and/in comedy
   -

   East-West (Europe) differences in TV’s approaches to race
   -

   The impact of American engagements with race and diversity in European TV
   -

   Romani (on) TV
   -

   Race, TV and the “War on Terror”
   -

   Race, fake news, propaganda
   -

   Race and nationalism in national broadcasting
   -

   Streaming, quality drama and the localization of racial categories
   -

   TV and the Holocaust
   -

   Intersectional approaches to race
   -

   Racialized reception histories
   -

   Race and labor in the TV industries
   -

   Racial policies: public broadcasting, EU policies
   -

   Color-blind casting
   -

   News anchors as representatives of racialized publics
   -

   The roles of film stock and video technologies in representing people of
   color
   -

   Meghan and Harry



Contributions are encouraged from authors with different kinds of expertise
and interests in media studies, television and media history.



You can submit your article proposal (max. 500 words) by June 1st, 2020 and
should be sent to the managing editor through e-mail: [log in to unmask]
All articles will be peer-reviewed.

Visit our website for more information
<http://viewjournal.eu/callforpapers/canned-television-going-global/>
https://viewjournal.eu/announcement/





VIEW is an open-access e-journal dedicated to sharing research on European
Television History and Culture. VIEW is supported by the EUscreen Network
and published by the Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision in
collaboration with Utrecht University, Royal Holloway University of London,
and the University of Luxembourg.





Kind regards,

VIEW Journal team



http://www.viewjournal.eu/

https://twitter.com/viewjournaleu/

https://www.facebook.com/viewjournal/


-- 

*Aisha Villegas*
Outreach & Communications Coordinator

*Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision*

*Media Parkboulevard 1, 1217 WE  Hilversum *
*Postbus 1060, 1200 BB  Hilversum | **beeldengeluid.nl
<http://www.beeldengeluid.nl/>*

----
Learn to speak like a film/TV professor! Listen to the ScreenLex
podcast:
http://www.screenlex.org

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