Please find below the CFP for *The Velvet Light Trap* issue 95. Thank you!


CFP: Media Values

The Velvet Light Trap, Issue 95 (to be published Spring 2025)

Media industries utilize a number of different strategies to assign value
to their commodities. Box office receipts have long been a benchmark of
success for theatrical film releases, despite proliferating ancillary
revenue streams. Audience ratings determined advertising dollars as the
dominant form of evaluation in linear commercial television.  High
engagement metrics on social media often translates to increased bargaining
power of influencers, actors, and writers alike. Yet, these processes of
valuation are in a constant state of flux dependent upon variables such as
technological innovation, economic conditions, and cultural climates.

The economic and cultural value of media is, therefore, far more complex
than formulas of dollar signs and industry metrics. Where and how
institutions, organizations, and intermediaries assign value reflects
ideological biases often along the faultlines of race, gender, and
class. Practices
like rewatching, fansubbing, fan fiction writing, and collecting all
express personal value as well as create economic value for media firms.
The politics of certain media objects and forms demonstrate the contested
terrain of social and ethical values amidst anxieties of industrial
transition and technological innovation.

Media industries themselves are objects of evaluation—which has become
clear with recent shifts in the criteria upon which financial organizations
value media firms and platforms. Industry-wide speculation regarding the
return on investment for streaming has proven to be unsuccessful for studio
and network executives and harmful for creatives. Tech and internet
companies constantly modulate the terms and interfaces of social media
platforms that provide users with valuable promotion and networking.
Concepts like brand recognition and brand identity have symbolic weight in
decisions of corporate restructuring, yet do not always translate to profit
if undercut by poor distribution or content management strategies. Of
course, these trends are merely the latest manifestations of the ongoing
and unstable processes by which value changes over time. Institutions and
intermediaries like art house cinemas, film and television festivals,
archives, professional organizations, and the academy all—to varying
degrees—influence how valuable a media commodity or company is at different
moments in its (potentially endless) lifetime.

This issue of The Velvet Light Trap will explore the varied relations
between media and value. We welcome pieces about all media forms and
industries, as well as submissions that look beyond these toward audiences,
stars, technologies, etc. We seek a range of methodological and theoretical
approaches encompassing—but not limited to—historiographic, textual,
political economic, and critical-cultural treatments of evolving valuation
practices in contemporary and historical contexts across production,
distribution, exhibition, reception, and regulatory processes. We look
forward to submissions which address any of the following topics including
but not limited to:

   -

   Studies of formal and informal circulation patterns and their impacts on
   value creation and/or destruction
   -

   Ownership in the media industries and ownership of media commodities
   -

   The evolving marketplace for content libraries
   -

   The continuing value of rights licensing in live broadcasting and
   streaming media
   -

   Archiving and preservation practices and priorities
   -

   The collection of physical media formats and material value in the
   digital era
   -

   The relationship between financialization and the media industries
   -

   Emerging cultural intermediaries like content aggregators
   -

   The use of (or troubling the use of) identity politics in the valuation
   of texts
   -

   The role of social media and viral marketing in the creation of
   anticipation or controversy
   -

   Explorations of geocultural capital and the mechanisms by which
   different nations, regions, and cities accumulate and exchange it
   -

   The role of creative labor in the production of value
   -

   The representation of national, religious, and/or political values in
   media texts and industries
   -

   The role of ancillary industries and markets in the construction of value
   -

   Academic patterns of value in relationship to certain media forms and
   industries


Open Call

In addition to accepting submissions that relate to the above theme, The
Velvet Light Trap will accept general submissions broadly related to the
journal’s focus on critical, theoretical, and historical approaches to film
and media studies. We hope that scholars inspired by the work published in
our themed issues, past and present, will especially consider submitting
their work.

Submission Guidelines

Submissions should be between 6,000 and 7,500 words, formatted in Chicago
Style (notes-bibliography). Please submit an electronic copy of the paper,
along with a separate one-page abstract, both saved as Microsoft Word
files. Remove any identifying information so that the submission is
suitable for anonymous review. Quotations not in English should be
accompanied by translations. Send electronic manuscripts and/or any
questions to [log in to unmask] by January 28th, 2024.

About the Journal
The Velvet Light Trap is a scholarly, peer-reviewed journal of film,
television, and new media. The journal draws on a variety of theoretical
and historiographical approaches from the humanities and social sciences
and welcomes any effort that will help foster the ongoing processes of
evaluation and negotiation in media history and criticism.  Graduate
students at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the University of Texas
at Austin coordinate issues in alternation, and each issue is devoted to a
particular theme. VLT’s Editorial Advisory Board includes such notable
scholars as Manuel Avilés-Santiago, Andre Brock, Dolores Inés Casillas,
Norma Coates, Brian Fauteux, Aniko Imre, Lori Morimoto, Ruben
Ramírez-Sànchez, Debra Ramsey, and Alyx Vesey. TVLT's graduate student
editors are assisted by their local faculty advisors: Mary Beltrán, Ben
Brewster, Jonathan Gray, Michele Hilmes (emeritus), Lea Jacobs, Derek
Johnson, Shanti Kumar, Charles Ramírez Berg, Thomas Schatz (emeritus), and
Janet Staiger (emeritus).


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*Paxton Haven* and *Ryan David Briggs*
Lead Coordinating Editors, *The Velvet Light Trap* #95
*University of Texas at Austin*

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Online resources for film/TV studies may be found at ScreenSite
https://screensite.org/