Dear Screen-L,
I'd like to invite interested parties to submit to us their book ideas
for our new series, Materializing the Digital.
Materializing the Digital seeks to interrogate the infrastructures,
relationships and imaginaries of digital technologies through
situated, empirical analyses of the production, circulation and use of
digital devices and systems.
Series Editors: Hannah Knox, University College London and Adam Fish,
Lancaster University
Positioned at the intersection of media studies, STS, anthropology and
sociology, the series will provide original, critical and
theoretically innovative understandings of the implications of digital
technologies for contemporary social life. Our intention is that this
series will provide a solid ground from which to engage and critique
the persistence of utopian, functionalist and dystopic visions of
technological futures.
We are particularly looking for projects that:
attend to the specific processes by which digital technologies are
produced, circulated and used;
analyze the nature of the infrastructures that digital systems rely
on, and the unforeseen material consequences and effects of digital
technologies (e.g. e-waste);
draw attention to materiality is to broaden the usual focus of ‘media’
(i.e. text and representation) to include issues like signal,
transmission and storage;
interrogate the interplay between material processes and social dynamics;
present theoretically informed ethnographic monographs that detail the
social, material and cultural relationships that structure the
production and circulation of digital media.
Proposal Guidelines:
To submit a proposal, please complete the MUP proposal form: Proposal Form PDF
Send completed proposal forms to Tom Dark, senior commissioning editor
at [log in to unmask]
For more information about the review process, please click here: Review Process
Forthcoming books:
Memory ecologies by Mél Hogan (coming September 2017)
Best,
Dr. Adam Fish
Senior Lecturer, Sociology, Lancaster University
+44 (0)1524 592699
[log in to unmask]
@mediacultures
Disclaimer: This communication may be monitored and collected without
consent in secret by the NSA and GCHQ.
On Thu, Nov 10, 2016 at 9:37 PM, Eric Hoyt <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> Forwarding this CFP on behalf of a colleague… Looks like a great conference.
>
> ------
>
> Screenwriting: Fact and Fiction, Truth and the Real
>
> Call for Papers
>
> In order to ensure timely notification and subsequent travel planning, please note the deadline:
>
> Abstracts for original paper presentations and panels may be submitted until November 22, 2016. The 10th Screenwriting Research Network (SRN) International Conference will be hosted by the University of Otago’s Department of Media, Film and Communication, in partnership with the New Zealand Writers Guild. It will take place in Dunedin, Aotearoa/New Zealand, on Monday 28th through
>
> Thursday 31st August 2017.
>
> The conference theme is Screenwriting: Fact and Fiction, Truth and the Real. SRN2017 will examine how we approach/frame our storytelling, in and from different contexts. This then brings in conventions, orthodoxies, claims about the real and the truth (which might be different from the ‘real’), as well as the cultural and industrial contexts of storytelling practice(s). In other words, how we justify telling our stories in a particular way and how these shifts impact our work as practitioners and scholars: for example, in Aotearoa New Zealand, why it is important to understand different cultural perspectives which include the very nature of storytelling, if we are to get (or get to) a particular truth.
>
> We want to discuss the role and function of conventions regarding fact and fiction, as well as interrogating the practices of certain genres and media.
>
> We invite discussion about screenwriting as an art located somewhere between fact, fiction, truth, and the real. We are particularly interested in abstracts for presentations on the following topics:
>
> • In relation to truth claims and narrative, can we separate the teller from the tale?
> • Writing the Real: adapting events into stories
> • How does collaborative screenwriting negotiate fact, fiction, truth, and the ‘real’?
> • How do we frame the local, the national, and the indigenous?
> • How can we narrate from a transnational position?
> • How do specific orthodox screenwriting frameworks affect the tales we tell?
> • Teaching fact, fiction, truth, and the ‘real’ in screenwriting
> • Reflections on narrative theory and conventions
> • Screenwriting and Literature: the adaptation of source narratives into scripts
> • Censorship, ratings, and screenwriting
>
> We would also like to invite abstracts for presentations beyond the theme of the conference. We are looking forward to abstracts that cover the wide field of screenwriting studies, including, but not limited to, the following topics:
>
> • Practice-based research in the field of screenwriting
> • Writing for series television
> • Different screenwriting practices and formats
> • Case studies on individual writers or texts
> • Historical perspectives on screenwriting and screenplays
> • Screenwriting, the screenplay and different production structures
> • Screenwriting and narrative theory in writing for short films
> • Screenwriting for games and animation
> • Screenwriting for new media forms, online, transmedia, etc. Are stories fully transferrable
> from one medium to another?
> • How does the digital age change screenwriting?
>
> Proposals for individual presentations and pre-constituted panels:
>
> Time allotted to each paper is 20 minutes plus discussion. Abstracts for original paper presentations and panels may be submitted until November 22, 2016. Earlier submissions are welcome. Please note: original, in-person paper presentations only (no repetitions from other conferences or former SRN
> conferences. Video presentations are not possible).
>
> Proposals for pre-constituted panels should include no more than three presenters (20 mins for each paper), the overall issue of the panel, abstracts for all of the presentations and, if possible, the name and a short biography of the chair of the panel. The chair should not be one of the presenters. If a proposal for a panel does not include a chair, the conference committee will appoint one.
>
> Please send abstracts (250-300 words) as a Word document, with the email subject heading “SRN2017 Proposal” to: [log in to unmask]<mailto:[log in to unmask]>
>
> Remember to state your name, affiliation and contact information. Also include a brief biographical statement (100 words) detailing your publications and/or screenwriting practice. We are currently in conversation with publishers about an edited anthology. If you are interested in your abstract being considered for such a publication, please indicate this in your submission. The organising committee plans to notify of acceptances/rejections by mid-December 2016. Please see our SRN2017 website at www.otago.ac.nz/srn-2017<http://www.otago.ac.nz/srn-2017> for information regarding Dunedin, New Zealand, and travel planning options.
>
>
>
> Eric Hoyt
> Assistant Professor of Communication Arts
> University of Wisconsin-Madison
>
> Project Arclight
> http://projectarclight.org
>
> Media History Digital Library
> http://mediahistoryproject.org/
>
>
> ----
> Online resources for film/TV studies may be found at ScreenSite
> http://www.ScreenSite.org
----
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