Call for videos – University of Copenhagen

Department of Media, Cognition and Communication
Audiovisual Thinking
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Issue #2012:5
Audiovisual learning 2.0

When the development of digital technology changes the media landscape – with for example social media, Web 2.0, mobile platforms and advanced animation capabilities – the conditions for teaching and learning also change. We invite theoretical and practice-based submissions as well as case studies on all aspects of education, lifelong learning and audiovisuality.

Topics could include (but are not limited to):

  • Moving Image Education (MIE) in practice
  • Case studies, analysis and theories of MIE platforms and resources
  • Audiovisual dissemination of academic research about learning and pedagogy
  • Theories of audiovisual learning, learning managements systems (LMS) and virtual learning environment
  • Theories of audiovisuality in the classroom and lifelong learning
  • Educational sites and programmes on TV and online
  • Educational wikis, viral videos & learning clouds

THIS CALL IS NOW OPEN!

Issue #2011:4
Digital activism - audiovisual strategies in political social mobilizing

This issue of Audiovisual Thinking address the role of new media in politics with specific  attention towards social mobilizing and activism. We invite both academic, practice-based,  theoretical and empirical, contributions on all aspects of the interaction between audiovisuality, ‘the viral’, p2p and activist politics – top down or bottom up.

Topics could include (but are not limited to):

  • The role of digitization in political mobilizing and/or the status of political activism in the digital age
  • The political participatory potentials and limitations of the ’digital revolution’
  • Digital documentary activism
  • Audiovisual digital strategies in political campaigns
  • Political crowd sourcing, crowd funding or activist videos gone viral
  • Activist mobilizing on social websites
  • The politics of websites and social websites with regard to activism – constraints and affordance
  • Technological aspects of digital activism
  • The interaction between online and offline activism
  • The interaction between established political parties and digital activism
  • Aesthetics and appeal of the activist viral video
  • P2P activist organizing
  • New media, audiovisuality and political institutional transformations

THIS ISSUE WILL BE PUBLISHED SPRING 2012



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