Media Industries Publishes Winter 2015 Issue
Visit us at mediaindustriesjournal.org.
<http://www.mediaindustriesjournal.org/index.php/mij/index>
Dear Friends,
We are pleased to announce that the Winter 2015 issue of *Media Industries*
is now online. We would also like to take this opportunity to remind you
that we accept submissions on a continuous rolling basis. Please note that
we are still accepting submissions for our spring 2016 issue.
*About Our New Issue *
Our Winter 2015 issue is the second issue to feature peer-reviewed essays.
Articles featured in this issue include:
· “PR and Politics at Hollywood’s Biggest Night: The Academy Awards
and Unionization (1929-1939)” - Monica Roxanne Sandler
· “The impact of working conditions and personality traits on the job
satisfaction of media professionals” - M. Bjørn von Rimscha
· “The Sony Hack: Data and Decision in the Contemporary Studio” - J.D.
Connor
· “Hacking Radio History’s Data: Station Call Signs, Digitized
Magazines, and Scaled Entity Search” - Kit Hughes, Eric Hoyt, Derek Long,
Kevin Ponto, and Tony Tran
· “Cultural Diversity as Brand Management in Cable Television” -
Melanie Kohnen
· “TV Got Better: Netflix’s Original Programming Strategies and the
On-Demand Television Transition” - Chuck Tryon
To view previously published issues, as well as our series of think pieces
by our editorial board members, please visit our website:
mediaindustriesjournal.org.
<http://www.mediaindustriesjournal.org/index.php/mij/index>
*Call for Papers *
We are currently seeking high-quality submissions for our third
peer-reviewed issue, to be published in Spring 2016.
*Media Industries* is a new peer-reviewed, multi-media, open-access online
journal that supports critical studies of media industries and institutions
worldwide. We invite contributions that range across the full spectrum of
media industries, including film, television, internet, radio, music,
publishing, gaming, advertising, and mobile communications. Authors are
encouraged to explore a range of industry-related processes, such as
production, distribution, infrastructure, policy, exhibition, and
retailing. Contemporary or historical studies may explore industries
individually or examine inter-medial relations between industrial sectors
employing qualitative, quantitative, or mixed methodologies; of primary
importance is that submissions adopt a critical perspective.
Authors may, for example, explore how social and cultural factors influence
media industry practices or the ways that media industry practices shape
cultural products. We are especially interested in contributions that draw
attention to global and international perspectives, and use innovative
methodologies, imaginative theoretical approaches, and new research
directions.
*More About Media Industries *
The journal is maintained by a managing Editorial Collective and Editorial
Board comprised of an international group of media industries scholars.
Editorial responsibilities rotate bi-annually among six universities: The
Chinese University of Hong Kong; Georgia State University; Queensland
University of Technology; University of California, Santa Barbara;
University of Nottingham; and University of Texas at Austin. Our Winter
2015-2016 issue was edited by the University of Nottingham
<http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/clas/departments/cfm/research/index.aspx>.
For additional information about the Board and Collective, please visit:
*Media Industries*
Website: mediaindustriesjournal.org
Email: [log in to unmask]
Facebook: facebook.com/mediaindustriesjournal
<https://www.facebook.com/MediaIndustriesJournal/?ref=hl>
Twitter: twitter.com/mediaindjournal
Sincerely,
Amelia Arsenault, Stuart Cunningham, Michael Curtin, Terry Flew, Anthony
Fung, Jennifer Holt, Paul McDonald, Brian McNair, Alisa Perren, and Kevin
Sanson
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