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Thanks for sending me a message.<br>
<br>
All emails will be answered by January 10th. I wish you a good start to the year.<br>
<br>
M.<br>
<br>
Am 15.08.2023 um 14:31 schrieb Liz Ellcessor via Members <members@lists.sigcis.org>:<br>
<br>
<div class="EmailQuote"><font size="+1" color="black">Hello all,<br>
<br>
Excited to share this call for the inaugural special issue of </font><font size="+1" color="black"><i>JCMS: The Journal of Cinema and Media Studies.</i></font><font size="+1" color="black"> Work on media technologies, computing, digital systems, and so on is
absolutely welcome!<br>
<br>
Abstracts (500 words) due: September 6, 2023<br>
Full article drafts (8,000 - 10,000 words) due: January 15, 2024<br>
Anticipated publication: fall 2025, volume 65, issue 1<br>
<br>
To submit, email the JCMS managing editor: </font><font size="+1" color="#0B4CB4"><u>editors@jcmsjournal.org</u></font><font size="+1" color="black"><br>
<br>
With questions, email the JCMS co-editors-in-chief: </font><font size="+1" color="#0B4CB4"><u>liz@jcmsjournal.org</u></font><font size="+1" color="black"> and </font><font size="+1" color="#0B4CB4"><u>bo@jcmsjournal.org</u></font><font size="+1" color="black"><br>
<br>
</font><font size="+1" color="black"><b>About the topic: “But Is it Media?”</b></font><font size="+1" color="black"><br>
<br>
The topic of the special issue is “But Is It Media?” As the field of media studies continues to expand, many scholars who operate under the media studies banner are shifting to studying objects, practices, and histories that look unlike traditional objects
of media studies analysis. Such work pushes the boundaries of media studies, productively challenging our conceptualization of what constitutes media and what value media studies analysis brings to our understanding of the world. While this work often generates
enthusiasm, it is also frequently met with skepticism. Scholars who conduct and present this work commonly find themselves asked, whether in Q&As or job interviews, “Sure, this is interesting, but is it really media?”<br>
<br>
This special issue takes up that question–“But is it media?”–as a provocation to embrace the elements of media studies that enhance, shift, or destabilize the very notion of media itself. In particular, we are interested in work that models how media studies
scholars can approach seemingly “non-media” objects, bringing out their aesthetic and cultural qualities as media. In conceptualizing this issue, we draw inspiration from the many scholarly works, some recent and some already foundational, that raise eyebrows
and push boundaries. Is a shoe a work of media? Is a filing cabinet? What about a seaweed forest, or a color, or a sex toy? These may seem like odd examples, yet existing scholarship has revealed their deep ties to media cultures, histories, reception, and/or
production. Our goal with this issue is not to seek some new, more definitive definition of media–that is, to relitigate what defines media–but rather to inspire a more capacious view of what media already is and the immense value of studying the lived world
around us through the lens of media.<br>
<br>
To read the full CFP, </font><font size="+1" color="#0B4CB4"><u>click here</u></font><font size="+1" color="black">.<br>
<br>
We look forward to receiving your submission!<br>
<br>
Best,<br>
Liz<br>
<br>
-- <br>
Elizabeth Ellcessor<br>
Associate Professor & Director of Graduate Studies, Department of Media Studies<br>
Director, Disability Studies Initiative<br>
Senior Faculty Fellow, Miller Center for Public Affairs<br>
University of Virginia<br>
</font><font size="+1" color="#0B4CB4"><u>lizellcessor@virginia.edu</u></font><font size="+1" color="black"><br>
<br>
Co-editor, </font><font size="+1" color="#0B4CB4"><i><u>Journal of Cinema and Media Studies</u></i></font><font size="+1" color="black"><br>
<br>
</font><font size="+1" color="#0B4CB4"><u>In Case of Emergency: How Technologies Mediate Crisis and Normalize Inequality</u></font><font size="+1" color="black"> (NYU Press, 2022)<br>
</font><font size="+1" color="#0B4CB4"><u>Disability Media Studies</u></font><font size="+1" color="black">, with Bill Kirkpatrick, eds. (NYU Press, 2017)<br>
</font><font size="+1" color="#0B4CB4"><u>Restricted Access: Media, Disability, and the Politics of Participation</u></font><font size="+1" color="black"> (NYU Press, 2016)<br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
</font></div>
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