Social
media are changing the way we receive, share and consume fact and opinion. One
of the reasons for that is the affordances of social networks that facilitate
the rapid, immediate spread of information (Nahon & Hemsley, 2013). Another
reason is the decreasing attention span of digital users and the ‘logic of
acceleration’ (Rosa, 2013) – people spend less time to engage with a topic, but
are more likely to form their opinion based on a headline, a meme or a short
tweet.
This edited
collection aims at establishing the theory and empirical research on this
topical subject, viral media. General public, academics and journalists use
“viral” in many ways. This book will narrow down the definition for media
studies and conceptualise the buzzword into a consistent theory. The working
definition of “viral” is the spread of information, opinion and entertaining
pieces that catch like a wild fire in a short period of time. It is similar to
a biological “virus”, as people pick it from others – close and broad networks,
acquaintances and strangers – and then pass on to the close as much as broader
networks. The biological definition is not enough, so we are looking at the
sociological and psychological explanations, too.
We are
welcoming theoretical and empirical studies on viral media.
The volume
welcomes, but is not limited to, contributions that work to answer the
following question:
- What makes people pick and share things online at a speed of a wild fire?
- Does the level of media literacy impact the “viral” decisions?
- Do professional journalists do things “virally” to catch up with distracted public? Research on the likes of BuzzFeed, HuffPost, social media use of journalists is welcome.
- What processes happen in our brain and psyche when we press the “share” button?
- How is viral different from popular?
- What do we mean by “viral media” – is it the artefacts that spread rapidly, or the networks and platforms that accommodate the speedy circulation of things?
- Case studies from various countries and contexts are welcome.
- Studies on public relations, advertising and “viral” are welcome.
- Attention economy and its impact on viral media.
- Specific cases that explore one phenomenon or a viral hit are welcome.
Other
proposals within scope will also be considered.
The editor
invites submissions of 200-250 word chapter proposals.
Deadline:
12 December 2018.
Submissions
should be sent to the editor, Dr Anastasia Denisova, Communication and Media
Research Insitute, University of Westminster a.denisova1@westminster.ac.uk
Submissions
should also include:
- Title of chapter
- Author name/s, institutional details
- Corresponding author’s email address
- Keywords (no more than 5)
- A short bio
Authors
will be informed of commissioning by the end of December 2018.
Commissioned
chapters will be around 6,000-8,000 words and will be due by 1st May 2019.
We have
interest from major publishing houses, who would like to publish this edited
book.
The fact
that an abstract is accepted does not guarantee publication of the final
manuscript. All chapters submitted will be judged on the basis of a
double-blind reviewing process.
Should you
have any questions, please don’t hesitate to contact the editor, Dr Anastasia Denisova a.denisova1@westminster.ac.uk
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