Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta magazines. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta magazines. Mostrar todas las entradas

17 de febrero de 2021

*CFP* "THE MULTIPLE DIMENSIONS OF MAGAZINE JOURNALISM", THEMATIC ISSUE, ANIMUS: INTER-AMERICAN JOURNAL OF MEDIA COMMUNICATION

It is open until April 30, 2021, the call for papers for the thematic issue "The multiple dimensions of magazine Journalism” to be published in Animus – Inter-American Journal of Media Communication (ISSN 2175-4977), a publication of the Postgraduate in Communication from UFSM Federal University of Santa Maria (POSCOM / UFSM), Brazil. Manuscripts must be written in Portuguese, Spanish or English with a length between 30.000 and 45.000 characters, to be considered for peer-review. The thematic issue will be published in the last trimester of 2021. This CFP aims to bring debates and reflections about news production in the magazine support, whether in physical or digital structure, through contributions from researchers in Social and Human Sciences, such as Communication, Journalism, Media Studies, History, Sociology, Studies Cultural, among others.
 
Contributions that address the following themes are encouraged:

  • Magazine journalism in the digital environment / cybermagazine journalism;
  • Migration from the printed to the digital environment;

6 de noviembre de 2020

*CFP* "RETURNING TO THE PAGE: VISUALISING DESIGN AND DESIRE IN FAN MAGAZINES", ONLINE 2021 CONFERENCE

Returning to the page: Visualising Design and Desire in Fan Magazines
February 8th-13rd, 2021
Online conference


This conference is designed as a sequel to our 2015 event Turning the Page: Digitization, movie magazines and historical audience studies.
 
That conference focused on the development of the study of historical fan magazines in recent decades, with a particular emphasis on the impact of increased digitization (by the Media History Digital Library, among others) on this development. In this context, we particularly emphasised the importance of “reclaiming” the fan magazine – an ephemeral and often academically neglected object – as an important research tool for the study of stars, fans, Hollywood and non-Hollywoodfilm industries and cultures, and more.