MEDIA FIELDS JOURNAL ISSUE 2
MEDIA, LABOR, MOBILITY

Call for Submissions:

http://www.mediafieldsjournal.org

Submission Deadline: October 15, 2010.

This issue of Media Fields Journal brings together interdisciplinary 
approaches to media, labor, and mobility. We invite manuscripts, art 
projects, and interviews that foreground the dynamic between the global 
circulation of media texts and the global dispersion of media production 
(the "new international division of cultural labor"). In popular and 
scholarly discourse on media, information technology, and globalization, 
mobility is often celebrated as a positive, enabling force without 
sufficient regard for material concerns and human subjects. Yet the idea 
that information and images move ever more freely across borders elides 
the fact that workers' movements and lives are increasingly regulated at 
multiple nodes, as illustrated by the recent, widely publicized case of 
suicides committed by workers at Chinese factories manufacturing goods 
for Apple, Dell, Sony, and other transnational electronics corporations. 
Scholars in fields such as cinema and media studies, anthropology, 
sociology, and communication have addressed this elision by 
foregrounding the material realities of mediated mobilities through work 
on offshore digital labor, geographical centers of digital activity and 
production ("the global city," "media capital"), the global export of 
electronic waste, and material infrastructures of media piracy.

In this issue, we aim to address questions of global worker mobility and 
immobility in relation to audiovisual media practices. For example, in 
what ways can media texts or discursive strategies mask or reveal 
transnational processes and sites of labor? How can the spaces and 
speeds of film, video, and other audiovisual media illuminate varieties 
of spatial and temporal disjuncture such as those experienced by 
"digital nomads" or formed in diasporic media cultures? How might 
digital labor facilitate the movement of media products and information, 
but not necessarily of laboring bodies? How do new regimes of creative 
production simultaneously expand and constrict workers' lived experiences?

We seek essays of 1500-2500 words, digital art projects, and audio or 
video interviews exploring possible relations between media, labor, and 
mobility. We encourage approaches to this topic from scholars in cinema 
and media studies, anthropology, art and art history, communication, 
geography, sociology, and other fields.

Potential topics for articles, art projects, or interviews include:

- The spatial dispersion/outsourcing of different tasks associated with 
media production
- Labor and mobile media technologies (cellular phones, MP3 players, GPS 
devices, etc.)
- Traces of, or reflexivity about, production in media texts and 
technologies
- Migrant workers and media
- Labor, media, and modes of travel and transportation
- Labor, media, and bodily (im)mobility
- Virtual labor and mobility in digital media spaces and industries 
(video games, online social networks, etc.)
- Reconfigurations of labor under new information and communication 
technology (ICT) regimes
- Global media production, distribution, and sovereignty
- Labor, media, and virtual, imagined, and aspirational mobilities
- Representations and aesthetics of labor and mobility in audiovisual media
- Mobility and fandom/fan labor
- Media piracy and questions of labor and mobility
- Mobility and the use of media technologies in labor struggles
- Creative labor, culture, and cosmopolitics

Feel free to contact issue co-editors, Hye Jean Chung and Athena Tan, 
with proposals and inquiries. Email submissions to 
[email protected].

For more information and submission guidelines, please visit 
http://www.mediafieldsjournal.org/

_______________________________________________
NetBehaviour mailing list
[email protected]
http://www.netbehaviour.org/mailman/listinfo/netbehaviour

Reply via email to