Call for Papers Edited Volume: /Mouse TV: The History, Economics, and Politics of Disney Channel/ Editors: Sarah Nilsen (University of Vermont) and Sarah E. Turner (University of Vermont) Disney Channel is the #1 children's television network today outperforming Nickelodeon by double digits.Since its launch thirty years ago, Disney Channel has transformed the landscape of children's media production, and its cultural influence both nationally and globally is unprecedented.Yet scholars have failed to engage with this pre-eminent force in children's broadcasting, and this collection will remedy this void by being the first major study of Disney Channel.The purpose of */Mouse TV/* is to complicate and expand the field of Disney studies by incorporating a broader range of theoretical and methodological approaches.Critical Disney scholarship is dominated by text based, qualitative analyses as exemplified in Henry Giroux's /The Mouse that Roared /(1999) and Elizabeth Bell, Lynda Haas, and Laura Sells's /From Mouse to Mermaid: The Politics of Film, Gender, and Culture/ (1995).Thisscholarship has tended to be unilaterally critical of the studio and has relied heavily on claims of the Disneyfication of society, yet the broad generalizations of much of this work have tended to lack empirical evidence and historical contextualization to support these readings. We are interested in original articles that will advance the field of Disney studies, contemporary children's media culture, and the cable television industry. Possible topics might include: ·socio-cultural and historical approaches ·ethnographic studies ·political economies ·sociology and television ·industry and institutional approaches ·television programming ·gender and sexuality ·race and ethnicity ·audiences and spectatorship Please send abstracts of 500 words to Sarah Nilsen ([log in to unmask] <mailto:[log in to unmask]>_) and Sarah E. Turner ([log in to unmask]) by August 15, 2014.Final essays will be due December 30, 2014.Essays should be 6,000-8,000 words in length and should follow MLA guidelines for citation and documentation. ---- Screen-L is sponsored by the Telecommunication & Film Dept., the University of Alabama: http://www.tcf.ua.edu