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Dear all,

Consider contributing to *The Ghost Reader: Recovering Women’s
Contributions to Communication Studies, 1925-1968*

Calls for Papers

*July 2, 2019*

*Call for Contributions*

*The Ghost Reader: Recovering Women’s Contributions to Communication
Studies, 1925-1968 (Europe and North America)*

Editors: Carol Stabile, University of Oregon, and Elena Hristova, Regent’s
University London

“She did not go along with the crowd. Not because she was a Negro. She was
not; she was White. Not because she was an Indian, but because a Southern
White woman said that slavery was a cancer eating into our national life,
and that it will in the end destroy us if we do not wipe it out; because
she talked about the churches who sent missionaries to Africa and yet held
slaves in their own backyard … that woman’s name has been wiped out of
history!” (Shirley Graham Du Bois, “As a Man Thinketh in His Heart, So Is
He,” *Parish News: Church of the Holy Trinity*, February 1954)

“If libraries hold all the stories that have been told, there are ghost
libraries of all the stories that have not. The ghosts outnumber the books
by some unimaginably vast sum. Even those who have been audible have often
earned the privilege through strategic silences or the inability to hear
certain voices, including their own.” (Rebecca Solnit, *The Mother of All
Questions*, p. 21)

We are seeking contributions to a volume titled *The Ghost Reader:
Recovering Women’s Contributions to Communication Studies, 1925-1968
(Europe and North America)*. *The Ghost Reader* will be an edited print
volume and an online publication (part of the Reanimate Collective
<http://roopikarisam.github.io/reanimate/>’s publishing ecology), featuring
research, scholarship, and criticism produced by women between 1925 and
1968. These two volumes will address the absence of scholarship and media
criticism written by women working in the overlapping fields that
contributed to the formation of communication, media, and cultural studies
research in the first half of the twentieth century. We hope that it will
also encourage research on these scholars, critics, and activists.

In North America and Europe, some groups of progressive women made inroads
into universities during the first half of the twentieth century,
completing undergraduate degrees and receiving PhDs from research
universities. Others, excluded from the academy by virtue of race or class,
analyzed and criticized media industries, as journalists and activists.
Often, these bodies of work developed innovative theories of communication
and methods for the study of the media, as well as anticipating ideas,
approaches, and concerns that would not reappear again until the 1970s.
Anthropologist Hortense Powdermaker, for example, conducted extensive
ethnographic research into race and gender in her study of the American
South, as well as her innovative ethnography of the film industry.
Sociologist Helen MacGill Hughes wrote about the human interest story,
reflecting her generation’s interest in areas of media production that were
devalued or marginalized within mainstream communication research. Mae Dena
Huettig wrote the first industrial analysis of the film industry, before
leaving research altogether to focus on political activism. African
American scholars and intellectuals such as Zora Neale Hurston, Claudia
Jones, Shirley Graham, Fredi Washington, and others wrote media criticism
for the black press (*The People’s Voice*, the *Chicago Defender*, the
*Pittsburgh
Courier*, etc.) and scholarly or literary journals such as the *Negro
Digest* and *Freedomways*.

Little of this work is taught today, particularly in courses mapping the
emergence of the field of communication/media studies. *The Ghost
Reader* addresses
these absences, publishing previously unpublished, out-of-print or
under-reviewed materials in two formats. The first is a print anthology for
use in classrooms, comprised of selections of writings by women. The second
is an open access reader that will include a broader range of scholarship;
a volume that can evolve and expand as new scholarship comes to light or is
curated by future contributors. The volume will be organized into subfields
(anthropology, audience studies, economics, performance studies, etc.),
with a concluding section on speculation and methods. Goldsmiths Press has
expressed interest in the proposal, and we aim to submit a full proposal to
the press in Fall 2020.

By restoring to view the work that women did during this seminal era in the
history of our fields, *The Ghost Reader* underscores their participation
in broader conversations about media, media industries, and popular culture
that have since been neglected. It also shows how women’s scholarly work
was often appropriated by established male scholars or excluded from
legacy-building and citational practices within the field.

A partial list of women for whom we are seeking contributions appears at
the end of this call. We are eager for authors to contribute additional
names and ideas.

We encourage collaborative contributions to this project. Contributors will
be expected to submit a letter of interest and short (no more than
500-word) abstract listing the scholar/researcher you will be contributing
to *The Ghost Reader* by September 1, 2019. Full submissions, including the
following information, are due on June 1, 2020.

   1. An introduction of no more than 1,000 words in plain text (.txt),
   Word (.doc or .docx), or Markdown (.md) (no pdfs) for the person whose work
   they are compiling, that includes a discussion of the continued relevance
   of this work to the field of communication/critical/cultural/media studies;
   2. Two articles to be contributed to the volume by the person whose work
   they are compiling, as well as images. These articles will need to be
   provided in plain text (.txt), Word (.doc or .docx), or Markdown (.md),
   along with pdfs of the original articles. The Reanimate Collective can work
   with contributors on file formats;
   3. Copyright permissions for the two articles, as well as images, or a
   record of good faith attempts to locate the copyright holder for orphan
   works. The Reanimate Collective can work with contributors on copyright
   issues;
   4. A bibliography with additional citations by the person whose work
   they are compiling;
   5. Five keywords, as well as an indication as to which section of the
   book the person whose work they are compiling should be included.

Because of the co-editors’ areas of expertise, this volume focuses on
Europe and North America. We hope that scholars in additional regions and
national contexts will be able to use this as a model for creating their
own Ghost Readers and are eager to field inquiries about those.

Please send inquiries and submissions to [log in to unmask] We look
forward to hearing from you.

Carol Stabile, Professor
University of Oregon, USA

Elena Hristova, Lecturer
Regent’s University London, UK


*List of possible subjects*


Gretel Adorno
Thelma Ehrlich Anderson
Marcela Averisti
Ruth Benedict
Hallie Quinn Brown
Helen Butcher
Eunice Cooper
Rosalind Coward
Marjorie Fiske
Jenny Garber
Hazel Gaudet
Rose Kohn Goldsen
Shirley Graham
Jeanette Green
Ruth Harper
Herta Herzog
Dorothy Hobson
Mae Dena Huettig
Helen MacGill Hughes
Zora Neale Hurston
Esther Cooper Jackson
Marie Jahoda
Claudia Jones
Babette Kass
Patricia L. Kendall
Rose Kohn
Dorothy Kopp
Gladys Lang
Eleanor Leacock
Queenie Leavis
Dina Levi-Strauss
Helen Merrell Lynd
Thelma McCormack
Margaret Mead
Audley Moore
Louise Moses
Pauli Murray
Elsie Clews Parsons
Louise Thompson Patterson
Hortense Powdermaker
Pearla Primus
Sheila Rowbotham
Patricia Salter / West
Jeanette Sayre
Yole Sills
Dorothy Helen Smith
Pam Taylor
Dorothy Thompson
Fredi Washington
Gene Weltfish
Janice Winship


*The editors are grateful to Hadil Abuhmaid for suggesting the title for
this volume, as well as Michelle Dreiling, Madison Heath, and Christopher
St. Louis who worked on contributions to this volume as part of their
course work.*


-- 
Elena D. Hristova

Lecturer in Media & Communications
Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences | Regent's University London,
UK
https://www.regents.ac.uk/about/our-people/elena-hristova

Critical Media Studies & American Studies
Department of Communication Studies | University of Minnesota
https://cla.umn.edu/about/directory/profile/hrist004


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