From
Trump’s discourses to the everyday life performances in digital platforms, from
representation of LGBTQ+ in TV programs to pornography, the relation between
gender, sexuality and media is ubiquitous and strongly embedded in everyday
life. The definitions of gender and sexuality are in constant flux with the
media playing a key role in shaping, articulating, representing and performing
these definitions.
The
current, general openness and debate on gender and sexuality is built upon the
struggles of many groups and individuals to bring these issues into the
mainstream. Issues that have important influences on the ways in which we live our
lives and view those of others. Because of political and cultural changes,
questions connected to sexual identity and gender are constantly under attack,
whilst opposite tendencies of reconfirming patriarchal scripts and resisting
challenging, and redefining these paradigms are simultaneously present.
Considering
gender and sexuality as social and cultural construction, this special issue of
Information Communication and society aims to explore issues able to focus on
the contemporary social changes that are connected to gender and sexuality in
and through media. The articles will be concerned, on the one hand, with
exploring aspects of the changing social and sexual landscape, on the other
hand, on the ways in which media seem to stubbornly recycle gender and sexual
stereotypes.
How do
these two tendencies relate to one another? How do contemporary gender
ideologies influence media perspectives and practices? Do mediated
representations reinforce, echo, or challenge social hierarchies based in
differences of gender and sexuality? How do new media technologies feed into
discourses on gender and sexuality?
Potential
papers could explore new researches at the forefront of media and communication
practice and theory and the nuances of contemporary sex and gender scripts as
they are played out in popular media looking at both the more traditional and
normative interpretation of gender and sexuality as well as texts that
challenge and therefore move beyond the heteronormative and sexist.
We are
looking for contributions that analyze media both in terms of representation
and agency and that will be able to reflect different cultural conditions and
experiences, contrasting perspectives in terms of analytical orientation, and
geographically dynamic subjects.
Possible
topics could include:
- adapting and resisting gendered and sexed identities
- forging new normative gendered identities
- dating and hook up apps
- use of social networking sites, including Instagram, Facebook, Twitter
- rebranding feminism
- pornography
- datafication of gender and sexuality
- representation of gender and sexuality in popular media
- gender and media production
- gender, sexuality and technologies, technology of pleasure, sex bots.
Please
submit your 300 word abstract along with the author’s bio (100 words) and
author’s full contact details before 31 May 2019.
Please
upload you abstract using this link.
Please
direct enquiries to Cosimo Marco Scarcelli, Tonny Krijnen and Paul G. Nixon
marco.scarcelli@gmail.com
krijnen@eshcc.eur.nl
p.g.nixon@hhs.nl
This Special
Issue of Information Communication and Society to be published in 2020
(online); 2021 (print) edited by Cosimo Marco Scarcelli, Tonny Krijnen and Paul
G. Nixon
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