In the
field of transnational media studies, food and food cultures are traditionally
examined as type of media content, environmental/commodity object, or mode of
sustenance (with some cultural significance), or, alternatively, as medium
through which relations of gender, class, sexuality, and dis/ability are made
manifest. Given this bifurcated lens, this issue seeks to bring together
articles that examine the nexus between food cultures, identity, and media
representation in more detail. Specifically, we seek submissions that use food
as a lens through which to study how its mediated representation (e.g.
television, print, film, the Internet/social media) reflects complicated
histories of colonialism, empire, neoliberalism, and inequality, but also
cultural resilience, social belonging, community, and political awareness.
Papers that
draw into this discussion the complicated relationship between food media and
racialisation, gender, class, sexuality, dis/ability, and other manifestations
of identity are particularly welcome – especially those that take an
intersectional approach and engage with the significance of changing and
culturally contingent conceptions of health and bodily comportment. Articles
that examine the use of food as a form of power and resistance, in both
productive and dangerous ways, and which reveal how larger patters oppression
and marginalization intersect with the social imagery, political economy,
public policy, and cultural survival are also desirable.
Topics for
this issue might include (but are not limited to):
- Digital media representation and food culture
- Food and intersectional identities
- Food and the politics of representation
- Food and post-colonialism
- Neoliberalism and global food regimes
- Food, privilege, and mediated cultural capital
- The cultural economics of food
- Food and transnational identities
- Food and social activism
- Food, power, and bodies
- Food, power, and discourse
- Food, capitalist forms of signification, and resistance
The GlobalMedia Journal — Canadian Edition welcomes
high-quality, original submissions on related topics to the above theme.
Authors are strongly encouraged to contribute to the development of
communication and media theories, report empirical and analytical research or
present case studies, use critical discourses, and/or set out innovative
research methodologies. The Journal is a bilingual (English and French) open-access
online academic refereed publication that aims to advance research and
Papers (5,000 to 7,500 words), review articles of more than one book (2,500 to
3,000 words), and book reviews (1,000 to 1,200 words).
All
manuscripts must be submitted electronically as a word document to Dr. Tina Sikka (tina.sikka@newcastle.ac.uk).
Guidelines available here.
Deadline: April 15th, 2019
Decision: April 30th, 2019
Publication:
June 30th, 2019
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