Call for Papers: Interrupted Reading – Follow-on Readings: Reading Journals (17-19 September 2018, Ruhr-Universität Bochum)
Interrupted Reading – Follow-on Readings: Reading Journals
International conference of the DFG Research Unit “Journal Literature” (FOR 2288)
17-19 September 2018
Ruhr-Universität Bochum
(German version below)
The international conference “Lektüreabbruch – Anschlußlektüren: Journale lesen” (“Interrupted Reading – Follow-on Readings: Reading Journals”) will take place from 17-19 September 2018 at the Ruhr-Universität Bochum. It will be organized by DFG Research Unit 2288, Journal Literature, in the framework of the programme priority “Coherence/interruption”. The aim of the conference is to examine journals of the 19th and early 20th century, taking the concrete materiality of the journal’s form of publication, and its potential to govern reception, as a methodological starting point. The specific temporality and materiality of journal literature governs processes of generation and superimposition of meaning, and both the conditions and the consequences of these processes will be explored. Areas of enquiry will therefore include materially offered reading paths and directions of reading, forms of reflection on journal mediality, and journal-specific logics of format and practices of reception. Case studies are welcome, as are historical and international comparisons, or work in the area of comparative media studies. Proposals focusing on the following areas are invited:
1. Conditions: production/distribution/communication
The contemporary reading of journals is subject to specific historical conditions. Developments in the production and distribution of the periodical press can thus be seen as dictating reception processes: they form the technological and economic basis for the diverse forms of periodicity, thereby determining the pace and rhythm of journal reception, and they develop formats and economies which condition journal-specific reception processes. In this sense, discontinuous reading of periodical publications is to be regarded as an effect of journalistic conditions, which are worthy of closer examination. The same goes for the development of coherence-forming practices of reception. This is closely linked with cultural, institutional and medial conditions of contemporary reading, which mediate the media-specific openness of the journal, and develop journal-specific forms of communication. Some of the questions to be asked here are: What developments in printing technology govern the timing of journal reception? At what pace, in what ways, and via what institutions do journals reach their readership? What economic considerations underlie periodical interruptions and their literary counterparts, cliffhangers? In which formats are there tendencies to encourage and institutionalize communication with readers, and what binding force is generated by relevant sections of journals, i.e. the printing of readers’ letters, or sections for correspondence and advertising?
2. Forms: materiality/time/space
Secondly, the conference will investigate the temporal and spatial format-related conditions of journal publications, and their effects on the reception of journal literature. The basic temporal and textual-spatial conditions of the journal as a media format, conditions to which both the publication and reading of journals are subject, are not aimed at closure, but at continuation, not at homogeneous coherence, but at heterogeneous diversity and permeable boundaries between written and pictorial components. Possible areas of enquiry therefore include forms of seriality and sequentiality, as well as narrative, thematic or media-format-specific forms of periodic interruption and the development of coherence, which condition both interruptions in reading and follow-on readings. The aim will be to examine micro and macro levels of coherent and discontinuous reception, and ways in which the materiality of journals governs reception: What reading paths and directions of reading are offered by narrative, structural, textual or visual elements? What modes of reception do journals, in their specific structure, mediality and materiality, invite? What reader expectations can be reconstructed in this way, and how are these fulfilled or disappointed?
3. Consequences: practices/semantics
The economic and institutional parameters and the resulting forms of journal communication, with their respective format-related conditions, favour the development of certain practices of reception and corresponding semantics. This raises the question of what practices of reception are implied by the logic of the format, which is based on coherence/interruption. The development of coherence takes place, for example, on the level of archiving: the binding of a year’s issues into a single volume, the issuing of title pages, the supplying of covers at the end of the year, and perhaps even indexes or library classification systems emphasize the nature of journals as works. Another question to be asked in this context – as part of the focus on coherence and interruption – is how to evaluate different options for reception resulting from parallel editions of a journal with differences in quality and design, or different intervals of publication (daily, weekly or monthly); different rhythms of distribution (e.g. depending on the place of residence of the subscriber) should also be taken into account. In this context we would also welcome contrasting studies on book and journal reception, on contexts of reception relevant across different works, and on ‘migrating’ texts and figures, which transcend the boundaries of more than one issue or of different journals. Removed from the context of the individual journal, individual (segments of) texts appear as mediated through decontextualized and recontextualized practices, embedded in partly private, partly public forms of reception and presentation such as scrapbooks, albums, reprints or grangerized books. These also seem a promising object of study in the framework of this section.
Submissions
Presentations should be 25 minutes long. The conference languages will be English and German, but papers in French are also welcome. Travel and accommodation costs will be covered by the research unit organizing the conference. Applicants should send an abstract (maximum length 500 words) and a short CV (maximum length 150 words) to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. by 5 March 2018.
The conference will be organized by sub-projects 2 (Nicola Kaminski, Volker Mergenthaler, Nora Ramtke, Sven Schöpf) and 6 (Monika Schmitz-Emans, Christian A. Bachmann) of DFG Research Unit 2288, Journal Literature.
Please address any queries to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Website of the research unit: https://journalliteratur.blogs.ruhr-uni-bochum.de/
Lektüreabbruch – Anschlußlektüren: Journale lesen
Internationale Tagung der DFG-Forschergruppe „Journalliteratur“ (FOR 2288)
17.-19. September 2018
Ruhr-Universität Bochum
Die internationale Konferenz »Lektüreabbruch – Anschlußlektüren: Journale lesen« findet im Rahmen des Programmschwerpunkts »Kohärenz/Brechung« der DFG-Forschergruppe 2288 Journalliteratur vom 17.-19. September 2018 an der Ruhr-Universität Bochum statt. Die Tagung zielt auf die Untersuchung von Journalen des 19. und frühen 20. Jahrhunderts, wobei die konkrete Materialität der Erscheinungsform sowie deren rezeptions-steuernde Potentiale den methodischen Ausgangspunkt bilden sollen. Die spezifische Temporalität und Materia-lität von Journalliteratur steuert Prozesse der Bedeutungsgenerierung und -überlagerung, deren Voraussetzungen ebenso zu untersuchen sind wie ihre Folgen. Gefragt wird entsprechend nach materialiter offerierten Lektüre-wegen und Leserichtungen, nach Formen der Reflexion von Journalmedialität sowie nach journalspezifischen Formatlogiken und Rezeptionspraktiken. Fallstudien sind ebenso willkommen wie historisch und international vergleichende Darstellungen oder medienkomparatistische Untersuchungen. Vortragsvorschläge werden zu folgenden Schwerpunkten erbeten:
1. Voraussetzungen: Produktion/Distribution/Kommunikation
Die zeitgenössische Lektüre von Journalen unterliegt spezifischen historischen Voraussetzungen. Entwicklungen in Produktion und Distribution der periodischen Presse können daher als ‚Taktgeber‘ von Rezeptionsprozessen angesehen werden: sie bilden die technisch-ökonomische Grundlage für die vielfältigen Formen von Periodizität, bestimmen dadurch Tempo und Rhythmus der Journalrezeption und bilden Formate und Ökonomien aus, die journalspezifische Rezeptionsprozesse konditionieren. Diskontinuierliche Lektüre periodisch erscheinender Blätter ist in diesem Sinne als ein Effekt genauer zu untersuchender publizistischer Voraussetzungen zu betrach-ten, ebenso die Ausbildung von kohärenzbildenden Rezeptionspraktiken. In engem Zusammenhang damit stehen kulturelle, institutionelle und mediale Bedingungen der zeitgenössischen Lektüre, die die medienspezifische Offenheit des Journals vermitteln und journalspezifische Kommunikationsformen ausbilden. Zu fragen wäre daher unter anderem: Welche drucktechnischen Entwicklungen steuern die Taktung von Journalrezeption? In welchem Tempo, auf welchen Wegen und über welche Institutionen erreichen Journale ihre Leserschaft? Welche öko-nomischen Überlegungen liegen periodischen Brechungen und ihren literarischen Entsprechungen, Cliffhangern etwa, zugrunde? In welchen Formaten gibt es Tendenzen zur Anregung und Institutionalisierung von Kommunikation mit Lesern und Leserinnen und welche Bindungskraft geht von entsprechenden Rubriken, dem Abdruck von Leserbriefen oder Korrespondenz- und Anzeigenbereichen aus?
2. Formen: Materialität/Zeit/Raum
Die Tagung fragt zweitens nach den temporalen und spatialen Formatbedingungen von Journalpublikationen und deren Auswirkungen auf die Rezeption von Journalliteratur. Die basalen zeitlichen und texträumlichen Format-bedingungen des Medienformats Journal, denen die Journalpublikation wie Journallektüre unterliegt, zielen nicht auf Schließung, sondern auf Fortsetzung, nicht auf homogene Geschlossenheit, sondern auf heterogene Vielfalt und durchlässige Grenzen zwischen Texten und Bildern. Zu untersuchen wären daher Formen von Serialität und Sequenzialität sowie narrative, thematische oder medienformatspezifische Formen der periodischen Unter-brechung und der Kohärenzbildung, die Lektüreabbrüche wie Anschlusslektüren konditionieren. Untersucht werden sollen in diesem Sinne Mikro- und Makroebenen kohärenter und diskontinuierlicher Rezeption sowie Formen der Rezeptionssteuerung durch die Materialität von Journalen: Welche Lektürewege und Leserichtungen bieten narrative, strukturelle, textuelle oder visuelle Elemente an? Welche Rezeptionsweisen legen Journale in ihrer spezifischen Struktur, Medialität und Materialität nahe, welche Lesererwartungen lassen sich auf diese Weise rekonstruieren und wie werden diese bedient oder enttäuscht?
3. Folgen: Praktiken/Semantiken
Die ökonomischen und institutionellen Rahmenbedingungen sowie die darauf aufsetzenden Journal-Kommunika-tionsformen mit ihren jeweiligen Formatbedingungen begünstigen die Herausbildung bestimmter Rezeptions-praktiken und entsprechender Semantiken. Es ist daher zu fragen, welche Rezeptionspraktiken die auf Kohärenz/Brechung beruhenden Formatlogiken nahelegen? Kohärenzbildung findet etwa auf der Ebene der Archivierung statt: Die Bindung von Jahrgängen, ausgegebene Titelblätter und zu Jahresende gelieferte Einbände, vielleicht sogar Register oder auch Aufstellsystematiken in Bibliotheken heben die Werkförmigkeit von Journalen hervor. In diesem Zusammenhang ist unter dem Fokus Kohärenz und Brechung auch zu überlegen, wie differente Rezeptionsangebote durch Parallelausgaben eines Journals in unterschiedlicher Qualität und Ausstattung oder in unterschiedlicher periodischer Taktung im Tages-, Wochen-, Monatsrhythmus zu bewerten sind, ebenso sind unterschiedliche Distributionsrhythmen (abhängig bspw. vom Wohnort des Abonnenten) zu berücksichtigen. Willkommen sind in diesem Zusammenhang auch kontrastierende Untersuchungen zur Buch- und Journal-rezeption sowie zu werkübergreifenden Rezeptionszusammenhängen wie wandernden Texten und Figuren, die Grenzen mehrerer Hefte oder verschiedener Journale überschreiten. Aus dem Zusammenhang des einzelnen Journals gelöst erscheinen einzelne Text(teil)e vermittelt durch de- und rekontextualisierende Praktiken eingebettet in teils private, teils öffentliche Rezeptions- und Präsentationsformen wie Scrapbooks, Alben, als Wiederabdrucke oder als grangerized books, deren Untersuchung im Rahmen dieser Sektion gleichfalls vielversprechend erscheint.
Einreichungen
Zur Tagung sind für eine Länge von 25 Minuten konzipierte Vorträge eingeladen. Tagungssprachen sind generell Englisch und Deutsch, doch sind auch Vorträge auf Französisch willkommen. Reise- und Übernachtungskosten werden von der veranstaltenden Forschergruppe übernommen. Zur Bewerbung erbitten wir entsprechende Abstracts (im Umfang von maximal 500 Wörtern) und einen kurzen Lebenslauf (maximal 150 Wörter), die bis zum 5. März 2018 an This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. eingesandt werden sollen.
Die Tagung wird organisiert von den Teilprojekten 2 (Nicola Kaminski, Volker Mergenthaler, Nora Ramtke, Sven Schöpf) und 6 (Monika Schmitz-Emans, Christian A. Bachmann) der DFG-Forschergruppe 2288 Journalliteratur.
Rückfragen bitte an: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Website der Forschergruppe: https://journalliteratur.blogs.ruhr-uni-bochum.de/
Call for Papers: Mapping the Magazine (Columbia College Chicago, July 25-27, 2018)
Call for Papers: Mapping the Magazine (Columbia College Chicago, July 25-27, 2018)
The fifth Mapping the Magazine conference, to be held at Columbia College Chicago, July 25-27, 2018, invites submissions on the theme Magazines as Curated Communities. Organizers seek proposals for individual papers on topics related to magazine research from many disciplines (Media and Communication, Journalism, Critical and Cultural Studies, Gender Studies, Sociology, Linguistics, English, History, Visual Communication, and others). The 2018 conference seeks to explore questions including but not limited to:
- Redefining magazines: Are podcasts, fashion and lifestyle blogs, Tumblr sites, online fan communities and other collections of content and audiences “magazines”? What are the arguments for and against expanding our notion of magazines?
- Magazine production: What technological or industry trends are influencing changes in production? What business models work or will work in the future? (Ethnographic approaches to studying magazine production would be especially interesting here.)
- The perseverance of print: How and why is the print medium currently being used by zines, little magazines, and other underground publications to resist hegemony and online trolling? How are custom(er) magazines using the print medium to convey exclusivity and luxury? How are mainstream consumer titles (re)marketing their print publications to digital natives? How are art magazines and literary magazines driving an interest in print?
- Magazines as sites of advocacy and resistance: What has changed, if anything, in magazines’ tendency to take on issues of social justice? What campaigns work, and what don’t? How are these publications doing in these contentious times?
- Trends in magazine content: What is considered newsworthy and storyworthy across generations, countries, and cultures? What is the balance of individualistic versus collectivistic values in different types of magazine content? What has changed over time? Are online news stories increasingly adopting some of the features of magazine content, and what does this mean for magazines? How have the constructions of race, gender, sexuality, disability and other group differences in magazine content changed over time?
- Readership trends: Who reads what magazines—and why? What is changing and why? How do magazines affect their audiences? What roles do readers play in the evolution of magazines and their content on various platforms?
- History of magazines. What can we learn from the past? What case studies inform our understanding of magazine media then and now?
- Advertising trends: From advertorials to native advertising, how has the tension between editorial and advertising evolved? What are the ethical and commercial considerations? How do readers discern the differences? How well do magazines drive sales? What other revenue streams exist?
“Mapping the Magazine” is a series of conferences established by Tim Holmes of Cardiff University. Four conferences have run so far—in 2005, 2007, 2011, and 2016. The fifth conference will be sponsored by Columbia College Chicago, Northwestern University, and the Magazine Media Division of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication.
The MtM conferences aim to serve as intimate and meaningful gatherings of magazine scholars from many disciplines who are interested in exploring the current state of magazine research and possibly developing collaborative research projects. MtM5, like all of the preceding conferences, is open to all scholars working in the broad field of magazine research.
Abstracts of 400 words for 20-minute papers are due by December 27, 2017. Please submit abstracts via the conference website at http://mappingthemagazine.org. For instructions or to confirm receipt of your abstract, contact This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Successful applicants will be contacted by February 1, 2018, and full papers will be due to the conference organizers by May 1, 2018. As in the past, papers will be delivered sequentially over the three days, not concurrently in separate streams. Conference delegates are asked to commit to attending all papers.
Registration is free for all presenters and keynote speakers. General admission is $50, and discounted to $25 for students and members of the AEJMC Magazine Media Division.
The organizers are planning to have an edited collection or a special issue of the Journal of Magazine Media based on selected papers from the conference. Please email any questions to the members of the organizing committee: Sharon Bloyd-Peshkin (Columbia College Chicago, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.); Betsy Edgerton (Columbia College Chicago, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.); Susan Currie Sivek (Linfield College, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.); Kevin Lerner (Marist College, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.); Tim Holmes (Cardiff University, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.); Miglena Sternadori (Texas Tech University, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.).
Call for Papers: Ways of Reading: An Interactive Magazines Workshop for PGs and ECRs (14 June 2018, Cadbury Research Library, University of Birmingham)
Call for Papers: Reading Miscellanies/Miscellaneous Reading: Interrelations between Medial Formats, Novel Structures, and Reading Practices in the Nineteenth Century (29–31 August 2019, University of Cologne)
International Conference of the DFG-Research Unit "Journal Literature" (FOR 2288), 29−31 August 2019, University of Cologne
The conference “Reading Miscellanies/Miscellaneous Reading” is dedicated to reading practices of miscellaneous media formats and novel structures as well as to their theoretical reflection during the ‘long’ nineteenth century. Our initial observation is that the success of miscellaneous media formats such as journals (i.e., the spectrum of periodical print publications from newspapers to pocketbooks, gift books, or annuals) and anthologies has significantly changed historical reading practices. In reconstructing these changes, the conference is interested in the transformation of "expected expectations" (Siegfried J. Schmidt) that also affect novel structures within as well as outside these media formats and thus contribute to the development of the modern novel.
We invite proposals on the following sections. The focus of the conference will be on German media formats and novels, but due to the diverse transfer processes at both the media and the literary level, a comparative, international extension is very desirable.
More info after the jump—