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INTERSECTIONAL-CHILDHOODS-YOUTHS  April 2021

INTERSECTIONAL-CHILDHOODS-YOUTHS April 2021

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Subject:

Call for Papers: Boyhood Studies - Storytelling to and about Boys

From:

Young Lee <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Intersectional Childhood and Youth <[log in to unmask]>, Young Lee <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Tue, 6 Apr 2021 17:49:10 +0100

Content-Type:

text/plain

Parts/Attachments:

Parts/Attachments

text/plain (30 lines)

BOYHOOD STUDIES
An Interdisciplinary Journal

Call for Papers
Storytelling to and about Boys: Meanings and Representations in Children’s Media

EDITORS: Cliff Leek (University of Northern Colorado, USA) and Jonathan Allan (Brandon University, Canada)

In recent decades, research has repeatedly demonstrated the overrepresentation of boys and men in children’s media (tv and movies, literature, and games). This field of research has, justifiably, focused primarily on the impact of this inequality on girls and women and has grown to consider not only the quantity of representations but also their content.

In this special issue of Boyhood Studies we invite scholars to turn this critical lens toward boys. What types of stories do we tell to and about boys? Who is telling the stories? Which stories are overrepresented and which stories are missing? What are the effects of the stories we tell (on boys, on their interactions with people around them, on who boys grow up to be…)? How are the boundaries of stories for boys defined and maintained? How and why do adults reread/revisit/remember the stories of their boyhoods? We invite scholars to consider children’s media not only as leisure/entertainment, but also as a source of children’s socialization and, therefore, a building block of society. We also encourage authors not to lose sight of how boys themselves experience media by considering what it means to read children’s media boyishly.

Submissions can take the following formats:
1) Full length empirical papers relevant to or dealing with gender and children’s media (max 6,000 words including references).
2) Commentary pieces illuminating trends or arguing for new directions in thinking about children’s media – especially as it relates to gender and boys (max 4,000 words including references).
3) Reviews of children’s media (tv and movies, literature, or games) that deal specifically with the gendered messaging to/about boys (max 1,000 words).

Timeline: The deadline for abstract submissions is April 16, 2021. Decisions will be made on which submissions to invite for the special issue by the end of April 2021. Full submissions will be due in October 2021 and the special issue will be published in Spring 2022.

To submit a work for consideration for the special issue, please prepare a 250-500 word abstract and submit it using the form at this link: https://forms.gle/Wg4YKXj1q2tr2MyR9

Contact the editors at [log in to unmask] More information, including the style guide, can be found at: www.berghahnjournals.com/boyhood-studies 

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