Archive for October, 2023

CFP: 5th International Celebrity Studies Conference: Celebrity Crises and Conflicts

October 24, 2023

July 1-3, 2024

University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam

Routledge, Celebrity Studies Journal, and the University of Amsterdam are pleased to announce the fifth Celebrity Studies conference. The conference will take place in Amsterdam, July 1st to 3rd.

The 5th International Celebrity Studies Conference will be themed ‘Celebrity Crises and Conflicts’. This subject will run through our plenaries and form a strand running throughout the conference.

Fame is fickle, as the saying goes, but in current times, celebrity appears to be more in crisis than ever. The #MeToo movement has brought to light disturbing facts about the reality behind the celebrity façade. The conspicuous consumption associated with stardom is attracting increasing criticisms in an era of pandemic lockdown, austerity, and environmental crisis.  Developments in artificial intelligence are feeding an existential crisis of celebrity, too: is stardom now becoming a post-human phenomenon? Additionally, geopolitical conflicts, as well as polarizing debates on class, race and gender differences, have put stars under increased political pressures, and have resulted in vicious attacks on – and by – celebrities. Finally, more and more public figures are opening up about their mental health crises, raising awareness about the negative effects of fame – burn-out, depression, anxiety, the impact of hate speech, fat-shaming, or performance pressure.

Together, these developments raise urgent questions about the current and past status of celebrity, such as: what do celebrity crises and conflicts tell us about the social, political, economic, and cultural dimensions of stardom? What can we learn about current, as well as historical, celebrity crises and conflicts? What impacts do they have on the study of celebrity as an academic endeavor?

The conference welcomes submissions from a broad range of disciplines that generate new ways of thinking and understanding celebrity: from film, television, literary, digital media, (art) history and theatre studies through to psychology, sociology, politics, etc.

Keynote speakers will soon be announced on https://celebritystudiesconference.com/

Possible topics include, but are not limited to:

Contemporary celebrity crises and conflicts / historical celebrity crises and conflicts / stardom and technological developments / virtual stardom / celebrity feuds / stardom and mental health / political conflicts and celebrity / economic conflicts and celebrity / celebrity divorces and break-ups / attacks on celebrities / legal conflicts and stardom / celebrity scandals / celebrity and intersecting oppressions / stardom and sexism / disgraced celebrities / conflicted celebrity / downsides of stardom / ‘cancel culture’ and celebrity / celebrity and the ‘cultural wars’ / celebrity and generationality/inter-generational conflict / celebrity deep fakes / celebrity and gamification / celebrity brand management / celebrity and platformisation / fan conflicts and celebrity / fan wars / fandom and celebrity conflict / celebrity and the pandemic / stars on lockdown / celebrity and industrial relations / celebrity and unions / stardom and synthetic media / celebrity and political crises / celebrity and climate crises / celebrity and war / celebrity and anti-fans / toxic fandom / destabilizing definition of celebrity / excessive media interest / social impact of political celebrities / weaponized celebrity / the conference team is open to other topics and themes, please get in touch if you have questions about potential approaches or topics.

The conference committee invites proposals for :

·         Individual 20-minute papers:

o   350 word abstract + 50-word biography in a single Word document

·         Pre-constituted panels comprising 3 x 20 minute papers:

o   150-word overview + 3 x 350-word abstracts + 3 x 50-word bios + name of lead contact and panel chair in a single Word document

·         Masterclasses for Early Career Researchers (ERC) (advanced PhDs or early-stage postdocs): sessions, moderated by members of the conference organization team, will include informal discussion on work provided by the ERC and sharing of ideas in a safe and constructive environment; feedback will be offered from keynote speakers and relevant senior academics:

o   Short outline of work (PhD thesis, chapter, project…) in progress: 150-350 words + 50-word biography in a single Word document. 

Please abide by the maximum word limits.

Stipends will be awarded to most promising abstract and best conference presentation by postgraduate students. Please indicate on your abstract if you wish to be considered for these.

A special issue of the best papers from the conference will be published in Celebrity Studies Journal in 2026

Deadline for all proposals: December 8th, 2023.

Successful abstracts will be notified by: December 22nd, 2023.

Enquiries/abstracts to: celebritystudies@gmail.com

More information (on conference fees etc.): https://celebritystudiesconference.com/

CFP: ICA 2024 Preconference Reviving Qualitative Audience Research for the Streaming Era

October 19, 2023


ICA 2024 • 20-24 June 2024 • Gold Coast, Australia
International Communication Association (ICA)

Preconference
Reviving Qualitative Audience Research for the Streaming Era
Wednesday, 19 June 2024

OFF-SITE: Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane (Kelvin Grove campus)

Division Affiliation: Popular Media & Culture, Media Industry Studies



Call for Papers
This full-day preconference will provide a space for those studying audiences through interviews, focus groups, ethnography, and other human-based qualitative approaches to share both findings and methodological tips and interrogations. Excited advertising rhetoric tells us that everything has changed, and certainly at industrial and textual levels, much has already been done and said to chart the shifting landscape. But we know little of how viewers, readers, and listeners that are spread across more content and more forms of media than ever before are experiencing these changes. Media content now travels more freely across national borders, remains relevant as long as it is accessible (which is far longer than in the past), and legacy media providers persist and adapt to an increasingly multifaceted field of creators and content. How do audiences use media now that they have greater choice and control? Are the streaming audiences of 2024 comparable to their earlier equivalents? Or, rather, how are they comparable, and how are they not?

Qualitative, audience research blossomed in the eighties, with numerous projects exploring the gendered, racialized, national, and class politics of viewing, the sociocultural uses of television and other media, and hence the place of media consumption in everyday life. Though audience studies has survived, and even thrived, since then in the service of examining fans, diasporas, and several other specific communities, we hope that this preconference will contribute to another wave of broad exploration of varying modes of consumption, of the politics of viewing, listening, and using, and the uses of media of all kinds.

We invite scholars working on any medium (television, music, film, streaming, games, podcasts, print; entertainment or news; social or legacy media) and/or with any audience, who are interested in discussing the state of audience research and in designing its future. Papers (20 minutes max.) may focus more on findings, on methods (especially methodological innovations), or consider both. Work in progress can also be presented (please indicate in your abstract).

Please submit a title and 400-word abstract about the work you will present and its level of completion. Submit to Jonathan Gray at jagray3@wisc.edu no later than 1 December 2023; please title your email “ICA preconference submission.” Potential submitters are welcome to contact the conference convenors (via the same email) to discuss ideas in advance. Notifications of acceptance will be circulated prior to release of the ICA schedule (ie, no later than 10 January 2024).

(Note that attendance at the ICA main conference in the Gold Coast from June 20-24 is not required to attend this preconference. For those who are attending the main conference, though, Brisbane is just under 2h away from the Gold Coast by train, with plenty of trains running daily. International visitors will likely find it more convenient to fly directly into Brisbane rather than the Gold Coast, since the latter requires transfer from elsewhere in Australia.)

CFP: Media Values

October 19, 2023

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 beunsuccessful 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 mediaindustries 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

● Therepresentation 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 vltcfp@gmail.com 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, ThomasSchatz (emeritus), and Janet Staiger (emeritus).

CFP: Urban Myths and Cultural Geography of Horror

October 18, 2023

Edited by Irena Jurković, Marko Lukić and Tijana Parezanović

Urban myths and legends continuously serve as a source of fascination and creative inspiration in anglophone cultures, especially in the context of horror genre, within which they have a specific way of articulating collective fears and fascination with the unknown. Additionally, urban myths also contain a significant spatial dimension, based on their rootedness in real life places and landscapes. Starting from the academically well researched and confirmed premise that horror genre is not a mere form of entertainment and escapism, and that in its complexity it assumes the function of reflecting various problems and anxieties of any given society, contributions to this collection should focus on urban myths as specific segments (themes, structural elements, leitmotifs, etc.) of horror narratives, which are conditioned and perpetuated by the spatial aspect of the narrative. With this collection we aim to explore the interconnections of urban myths, horror genre, and human geography, through analyses of various examples of anglophone horror narratives in different media – literature, TV and cinema, video games, or comic books.

Analyses of the variety of horror subgenres (e.g., supernatural horror, slasher horror, body horror, psychological horror, etc.) and narratives from different periods are welcome as the diversity will give insight into different styles and discourses, enable comparisons, and hence also provide a broader perspective on the main topic, all with a view to establishing a common approach to the specific nexus of urban myths, horror genre, and human geography, and thus creating what might be defined as new cultural geography of a distinctive kind. Within the selected narrative, exploring human interaction with the physical and social surroundings allows for a further development of a specific analytical framework, which brings an understanding of the complex ways in which horror narratives, through their frequent reliance on urban myths and legends, shape our comprehension of real places and spaces of social reality. Therefore, this collection calls for contributions which through a detailed multi-methodological analysis (discourse analysis, content analysis, etc.) of selected narratives explore the ways in which horror genre (de)constructs or transcends temporal and spatial limitations, thus not only reflecting but also influencing and/or shaping the broader social, cultural, and political context.

Essays may explore but are not limited to the following topics:

  • representation and perception of urban myths in anglophone horror films and other media forms, such as comics and video games
  • urban myths and spatiality/human geography
  • geographical roots of urban myths
  • haunted spaces/places
  • questions of identity and representation in relation to urban myths/mythologies
  • urban myths and new narrative forms
  • urban myths and the creation of new cultural and historical paradigms
  • the political discourses of urban myths
  • urban myths and place identity
  • gender and urban myths in horror
  • reshaping of a national contemporaneity through urban myth narratives
  • comparative analysis of different mediatic representations
  • urban legends about media told through media
  • intersections of real and fictional spaces within urban myths
  • social dynamic established between urban myths and legends on the one hand, and their reinterpretations in horror narratives on the other
  • new theoretical practices and understandings of the cultural geography of horror
  • the intersection of folklore and horror
  • digital narratives and the digitalization of urban myths
  • spatial horror in video games
  • cinematic techniques and spatial horror
  • visual constructions and perceptions of spatiality within urban myths

We invite all interested scholars to send their proposal (400-500 words) and short bio (max. 200 words, including author’s academic affiliation) to urbanmythsculture@gmail.com by November 15th 2023. Full essays should be 7000-8000 words (incl. references, notes and citations) and use the MLA style guide. University of Wales Press has expressed interest in the volume as part of their Horror Studies series.

Notification of acceptance: November 20th 2023.

Deadline for essay submission: January 20th 2024.

CFP: Emerging Directions in News Use Research – Leverhulme Project Launch Event & Open Conference

October 18, 2023

We are delighted to announce this Call for Papers, for the fully virtual and free 1 day conference on Emerging Directions in News Use Research on 20th March 2024.The event marks the launch of the Leverhulme Trust funded parents’ news use project – which runs from the fall of 2023 to the fall of 2025. The Leverhulme News Use project aims to examine how parents engage with and respond to news at critical moments of crisis. The project team includes Professor Ranjana Das, Dr Thomas Roberts, Dr Emily Setty and Dr Maria-Nerina Boursinou from the Department of Sociology (University of Surrey)  

Emerging Directions in News Use Research – a day-long, international, virtual conference – aims to bring together a global group of scholars involved with researching news use, news audiences and consumption, and news engagement and disengagement. We are keen to hear from a range of empirical contexts, from projects using tried and tested as well as more creative and innovative methodologies, and to showcase the work of scholars across career stages in the fields of Sociology, Journalism, Media and Communication, and more. 

Keynote speakers at the event include Professor Brita Ytre-Arne, University of Bergen, Norway; Dr Jonathan Corpus Ong, University of Massachusetts, Amherst; Professor Kim Schroeder, Roskilde University, Denmark; Professor Sahana Udupa, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Germany and Professor Lynn Schofield Clark, University of Denver, Colorado. 

Submission Portal: We welcome submissions for a 10-12 minute paper presentation on this submission portal in the following areas, which are included below, but not limited to- 

Submission Topics:  

  • News use, environmental change and the climate crisis 
  • News use in relation to young people and sex and relationships 
  • Datafication, algorithms and the news 
  • Theoretical perspectives on news use 
  • Methodological aspects of news consumption research 
  • News use, risk and anxiety 
  • Families, parenting, children and the news 
  • News audiences and users 
  • News literacy 
  • News use research and global disparities and inequalities 
  • Disinformation 
  • News use and disconnection research 

Abstract Submission Details: 

Final submission deadline: 5pm BST on Monday 2nd December 2023 

Notification of outcome: Friday 15th December 2023 

Deadline for Registrations (registration is free): Monday 18th March 2024 

Event date (fully online): Wednesday 20 March 2024 , 0900 to 1700* GMT 

Submission portal: [please submit your abstract here

Please email any question you may have about submissions to Dr Nerina Boursinou (m.boursinou@surrey.ac.uk)

CFP: PoP24 Conference

October 18, 2023

Power of Prestige: Media, Fame and the Environment

Date: July 10-12, 2024

Location: Oxford University, UK

Keynote Speakers

Professor P David Marshall, Charles Sturt University, Australia

Associate Professor Helle Kannik Haastrup, University of Copenhagen, Denmark

Call for Papers

Prestige is the status or reputation associated with renown, acclaim or glamour. It is often linked with celebrities and fame, and in contemporary mediated societies, this status is often afforded through the public visibility of legacy or digital media systems. Through the Power of Prestige conference series, we endeavour to explore the power associated with prestige as well as the power that prestige brings. While conceptually aligned with the areas of media and cultural studies, the conference series seeks explorations of the theorisation and application of prestige in different fields including sociology, criminology and political studies. The conference series also aims to explore the utility of prestige when encountering social issues such as political or environmental activism.

Starting broadly in the area of media studies, the inaugural Power of Prestige conference invites scholars researching areas related to media, fame and the environment to explore the central question of how prestige (or fame) is formulated, utilised, and critiqued. We welcome submissions in the following (non-exhaustive) topic areas:

  *   Theoretical explorations of the concept of Fame and Prestige

  *   Constructions and utilisation of Fame and Prestige in media industries

  *   Fame and Prestige in the Global South

  *   Power and influence of the media

  *   Prestige, Attention and the Environment

  *   Power of environmental activism

  *   Prestige of celebrity activism

  *   Building prestige through social media

  *   Prestige and Fame in the age of digital media

  *   Prestige, Fame and AI

Submission may be for individual 15-minute presentations or panels of 3 papers.

We invite scholars from a diverse range of career levels, including PhD candidates and Early Career Researchers, and institutional affiliations to submit to the conference and associated publication opportunity.

Publication Opportunity

Best papers from the conference will be provided the opportunity to submit chapters to an edited volume, subject to double blind peer review. Abstracts submitted for the edited volume only are also welcome.

Submission

Please send the following to CJcelebrityresearch@gmail.com<mailto:CJcelebrityresearch@gmail.com> by the submission deadline:

  *   250 word abstract

  *   5-6 key words

  *   100 word biography

  *   Statement indicating whether you wish to be considered for the conference, edited volume, or both.

Timeline

Call released: October 6, 2023

Abstract deadline: December 18, 2023

Notification of acceptance: January 31, 2024

Conference dates: July 10-12, 2024

Conference Co-Chairs

Dr Jackie Raphael-Luu, University of Arts London

Dr Celia Lam, University of Nottingham Ningbo China

CFP: Selfing and Shelving: Zines, Zine Media, and Zintivism

October 18, 2023

Selfing and Shelving: Zines, Zine Media, and Zintivism

Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, Germany

May 3, 2024

*Deadline December 31, 2023*

Zines are extremely versatile and shapeshift across various historical and cultural contexts. The term covers a wide range of objects with different aesthetic and material qualities as well as contexts of production and reception: Zines accommodate the collective concerns of fans and activists (zintivism) and the personal voice of the diarist and letter writer. Since the rise of digital media, zines and their aesthetics have become portable: Digitised and digital zines exist alongside blogs, social media, podcasts, and substacks, which seem to exhibit zine-y tendencies, while digital infrastructures have changed the ways that print zines are produced, distributed, and archived.

At the same time, print media, including zines, have seen a revival and postdigital reinvention, not the least as a paper-based escape from screens. In this new constellation, we propose to revisit questions like: Where does the zine begin and end and how have its meanings changed for readers, collectors, and makers? How can contemporary developments of the zine (like the wave of quaranzines) change our understanding of its meaning, genealogy, and archive? And what, and where, are zines now?

This symposium suggests considering these questions through the lens of

  • shelving – the zine at home, on the shelves of libraries, archives, and collectors, its repurposing and disassembling, its neglect as ephemera as well as remediation through reprints and staging in exhibitions, coffee table books, etc.
  • and ‘selfing’ – the zine as a tool in making identities and ‘working on the self,’ as a ‘third space’ for new subjectivities, as ‘sticky’ with affects, as the glue of communal belonging (local/transnational), as resource for ‘subcultural capital’ and distinction, and as conduit for relationships and activism.

We especially welcome papers that propose theoretical approaches which attend to the materiality of zines and zine production and consider the printed zine as only one form of zine media. We are interested in new approaches to zines as well as in investigations of media and objects that borrow from, reference, mimic, disguise as, or are influenced by the zine – that are in some way zine-y and take the format, aesthetics, tone, and /or affect beyond paper.

Please send an abstract (ca. 300 words) + short bio to safazli@uni-mainz.de and milos.hroch@fsv.cuni.cz by December 31, 2023.

This symposium is designed as a friendly space for established and emerging scholars to share and discuss ideas. We also encourage practitioners to apply and are happy to accommodate non-academic formats of presentation.

Organisers: Sabina Fazli, Obama Institute, Johannes Gutenberg University, Mainz, Germany and Miloš Hroch, Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic.

CFP: Girls’ and Young Women’s Textual Cultures Across History: Imitation, Adaptation, Transformation

October 18, 2023

The editors would like to invite chapters of 7,000 words for an edited collection, to be submitted to
Routledge’s Children’s Literature and Culture Book Series. We aim to publish the collection in 2025.

Readers have always interacted with texts to create unique interpretations. Imitations, adaptations, and
transformations–from reading texts aloud to dramatising them, from sequels in manuscript and print
to new media, from drawing characters for fun to making animated films–have long been central to
readers’ interactions with texts, particularly for girls and young women. These include, for example,
early modern girls’ adaptations of romances, Victorian girls’ creation of magazine clubs, and
contemporary fan fiction communities. Yet many of these practices have often been dismissed as
‘amateur’ and ‘girly’, with their authors and creators doubly marginalised due their age and gender. 
They have, therefore, not always received the sustained critical attention they merit. This collection
seeks to retrieve girls’ and young women’s ‘amateur’ and ‘girly’ imitative, adaptive, and
transformative writing practices in diverse genres through time and across the globe.

Textual engagement is often at the heart of the educational and recreational cultures of young people,
with even the basic practices of becoming literate affording opportunities for creative response.  Anne
Haas Dyson points out that copying is ‘not a reproductive task, but an intrinsic part of the production
process’ for young people (12). Similarly, Jackie Marsh writes that ‘children do not just adopt […]
narratives in an unreflective manner. They build on and develop […] narratives in interesting, creative
ways’ (32). Henry Jenkins’ phrase ‘textual poachers’ also illuminates children’s propensity to take
textual scaffolds and utilize them for their own creative purposes. We suggest that this practice,
though determined by historical context, has happened across time and space. In this landmark essay
collection, we wish to chart the history of girls’ textual participatory cultures from 1500 to the present
day.

Although work on the histories of girls’ and women’s transformative works exists, these practices and
communities–especially those predating the twentieth century–remain understudied (but see, e.g.,
Glosson, 2020; Hellekson, 2023; Rosenblatt & Pearson, 2017; Willis, 2016). This collection provides
fresh histories of ‘girly’ textual practices, considering how girls and young women have appropriated,
imitated, adapted, and transformed (popular) texts across time. In doing so, it seeks to create a deeper
history of modern-day fannish practices, one that spans centuries and continents.  

Girls and young women, especially those who are further minoritised by race, class, sexuality, or
location, have been particularly drawn to participatory cultures, and especially to appropriative
writing. However, their writing has, historically, been relegated to the sidelines, and its histories and
trajectories are only now being recovered. Practices deemed ‘amateur’, such as creating homemade
magazines and writing fan fiction, are often lambasted, with female fans derided as ‘frenzied,’
‘hysterical,’ ‘dangerous,’ and ‘excessive’ (Busse 73–4). As scholars such as Melissa Click, Kristina
Busse, and Matt Hills have argued, fans who are both female and young are particularly pathologized,
with accusations of ‘girliness’ having been used as a basis for the widespread dismissal of many
cultural practices throughout time.  We understand ‘girls and young women’ broadly and suggest that
how these categories are understood may vary depending on geographical or temporal contexts. As
such, we encourage abstracts that consider racialized, neurodivergent, disabled, LGBTQ+, or
otherwise minoritised groups of young people.  

Contributions may include (but are not limited to) considerations of:

  • Amateur and professional textual adaptations and transformations by girls and young women,
  • from theatre performances and songs to commonplace books, magazines and fan fiction to
  • film and social media 
  • The gendered and aged dimensions of rewriting and revising texts throughout time
  • Authoring “official” and “unofficial” sequels
  • Manuscript magazines and amateur printing
  • Creating “Pickwick clubs” and other literary societies
  • Revisiting and revising childhood reading and writing in adulthood
  • Fanzines and participatory internet cultures
  • Editorials, letters to the editor, and other literary critical correspondence
  • Theoretical reflections on intertextuality and adaptation
  • Theoretical reflections on age
  • Theoretical and historical reflections on ideas of authorship and intellectual property

We invite the submission of abstracts of 350 words and brief author bio by 31 January 2024.

Accepted essays of 7,000 words will be due by 1 June 2024.

Editor feedback on essays: Fall 2024

Revised essays due: Spring 2025
 
Estimated publication: 2025

To be emailed to editors Lois Burke (l.m.burke@tilburguniversity.edu), Jennifer Duggan
(jennifer.duggan@usn.no) and Edel Lamb (e.lamb@qub.ac.uk). 

References
Busse, Kristina. 2013. “Geek Hierarchies, Boundary Policing, and the Gendering of the Good Fan.”
Participations 10(1): 73–91. https://www.participations.org/10-01-06-busse.pdf.

Click, Melissa. “‘Rabid,’ ‘Obsessed,’ and ‘Frenzied’”: Understanding Twilight Fangirls and the
Gendered Politics of Fandom.” Flow: A Critical Forum on Media and Culture.
https://www.flowjournal.org/2009/12/rabid-obsessed-and-frenzied-understanding-twilight-fangirls-and-the-gendered-politics-of-fandom-melissa-click-university-of-missouri/.

Glosson, Sarah. 2020. Performing Jane: A cultural history of Jane Austen fandom. Louisiana State
University Press.

Haas Dyson, Anne. 2010. ‘Writing childhoods under construction: Re-visioning ‘copying’ in early
childhood’, Journal of Early Childhood Literacy, 10(1), 7–31. DOI: 10.1177/1468798409356990. 

Hellekson, Karen. 2023. “Fandom, Fanzines, and Archiving Science Fiction Fannish History.”
Proceedings from the Document Academy 10(1). https://doi.org/10.35492/docam/10/1/2.

Hills, Matt. 2012. “Twilight Fans Represented in Commercial Paratexts and Inter-fandoms: Resisting
and Repurposing Negative Fan Stereotypes.” In Genre, Reception, and Adaptation in the Twilight
Series, edited by Anne Morey, 113–29. Ashgate.

Marsh, Jackie. 2010. Childhood, Culture and Creativity: A Literature Review. Newcastle-upon-Tyne:
Creativity, Culture and Education. 

Rosenblatt, Betsy, and Roberta Person (Eds.). 2017. Sherlock Holmes, Fandom, Sherlockiana, and the
Great Game (special issue). Transformative Works and Cultures 23.
https://journal.transformativeworks.org/index.php/twc/issue/view/27.

Willis, Ika (Ed.). 2016. The Classical Cannon and/as Transformative Work (special issue).
Transformative Works and Cultures 21.
https://journal.transformativeworks.org/index.php/twc/issue/view/23.