Following popular application of Gérard Genette’s literary term
“paratexts” to film, paratexts here signifies those peripheral items emerging
from and encircling a primary (filmic) text. Critically, film paratexts mediate
the relationship between audience and film by shaping reputations, expectations
and adding meaning to its consumption. While traditional examples of film
paratexts range from movie reviews to advertisements and promotional material,
digital and cultural shifts have driven new iterations, shaping modern
cinematic reception and engagement. This evolving influence of paratexts on
film culture and consumption demands attention, aligning with calls for media
literacy in response to this proliferation of technology.
Cinephile 14.1 aims to interrogate this shifting landscape by
considering digital, cultural, or historical forces mediating film reception
and film culture more generally. While audience and reception studies have
flourished in recent decades (Janet Staiger; Barbara Klinger; Linda Williams)
and paratextual analysis has rigorously investigated fanfictions and trailers
(Henry Jenkins; Jonathan Gray; Chuck Tryon; Keith M. Johnston), analysis of the
interrelation of paratexts and audiences in today’s technological landscape
requires further investigation.
Cinephile 14.1: Audiences and Paratexts invites scholarship that
thoughtfully expands beyond the screened object to consider the meaning and
meaning-making roles of contextual and paratextual factors. Special preference
will be given to papers discussing film, television, and motion picture media.
Possible topics can include (but are not limited to) any of the following:
- Film reception and audience studies
- Internet film cultures: blogging, social media, etc.
- Streaming sites (Netflix, Amazon Prime, Mubi, Hulu, etc.), film culture and audience behaviours
- Technology and film-watching; interactive cinema, virtual reality, 4DX, Dolby Atmos, etc.
- Film promotion: advertisements, trailers and branding
- Cultural differences in film promotion, consumption, reception
- Fandom; fan-fiction, cosplay, fan content
- Reputation and reception; movie reviews, public discourse
- Marketing, endorsements and product placements as film promotion
We encourage submissions from graduate students, postdoctoral
researchers, and established scholars. Papers should be between 2,000-3,500
words, follow MLA guidelines, and include a detailed works cited page, as well
as a short biography of the author. Submissions should be directed toward submissions@cinephile.ca and general inquiries toward info@cinephile.ca.
Submissions are due by September 15, 2019.
Cinephile is the University of British Columbia’s film journal,
published with the continued support of the Centre for Cinema Studies. Previous
issues have featured original essays by such noted scholars as Lee Edelman,
Slavoj Žižek, Paul Wells, Murray Pomerance, Ivone Marguiles, Matt Hills, Barry
Keith Grant, K.J. Donnelly, and Sarah Kozloff. Since 2009, the journal has
adopted a blind review process and has moved to annual publication. It is
available both online and in print via subscription and selected retailers.
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