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Call for Papers

Researching (Popular) Media in the Age of Convergence:
Methodological innovations in the study of media industries, texts, 
technologies and audiences

ICA Preconference by the Popular Communication Division

22nd June 2010, Singapore

The processes of digitization and deregulation have transformed the 
production, distribution and consumption of information and entertainment 
media over the past three decades. Today, researchers are confronted with 
profoundly different landscapes of domestic and personal media than the 
pioneers of qualitative audience research that came to form much of the 
conceptual basis of Cultural Studies first in Britain and North America and 
subsequently across all global regions.

The process of media convergence, as a consequence of the dual forces of 
digitisation and deregulation, thus constitutes a central concept in the 
analysis of popular mass media. From the study of the internationalisation and 
globalisation of media content, changing regimes of media production, via the 
social shaping and communication technologies and conversely the impact of 
communication technology on social, cultural and political realities, to the 
emergence of transmedia storytelling, the interplay of intertextuality and 
genre and the formation of mediated social networks, convergence informs 
and shapes contemporary conceptual debates in the field of popular 
communication and beyond.

However, media convergence challenges not only the conceptual canon of 
(popular) communication research, but poses profound methodological 
challenges. As boundaries between producers and consumers are increasingly 
fluent, formerly stable fields and categories of research such as industries, 
texts and audiences intersect and overlap, requiring combined and new 
research strategies.

This preconference aims to offer a forum for the presentation and discussion 
of methodological innovations in the study of contemporary media and the 
analysis of the social, cultural and political impact and challenges arising 
through media convergence. The preconference thus focuses on the following 
methodological questions and challenges:

• New strategies of audience research responding to the increasing 
individualisation of popular media consumption.

• Methods of data triangulation in and through the integrated study of media 
production, distribution and consumption.

• Bridging the methodological and often associated conceptual gap between 
qualitative and quantitative research in the study of popular media.

• The future of ethnographic audience and production research in light of 
blurring boundaries between media producers and consumers.

• A critical re-examination of which textual configurations can be meaningfully 
described and studied as text.

• Methodological innovations aimed at assessing the macro social, cultural and 
political impact of mediatization (including, but not limited to, “creative 
methods”).

• Methodological responses to the globalisation of popular media and 
practicalities of international and transnational comparative research.

• An exploration of new methods required in the study of media flow and 
intertextuality.


We invite contributions in form of paper presentations and discussion papers. 
Please submit extended abstracts of 300-500 words (including contact 
information and affiliation) to Cornel Sandvoss, ([log in to unmask]), 
Popular Communication Division Chair, by Thursday, 5th November 2009.