[Air-L] Ada: A Journal of Gender, New Media, and Technology - CFP for Issue 10, Open Call

Sarah T. Hamid shamid at uoregon.edu
Wed Oct 7 18:48:06 PDT 2015


Call for papers: Open issue
Ada: A Journal of Gender, New Media, and Technology | adanewmedia.org
Issue 10, forthcoming November 2016

Edited by Radhika Gajjala (Bowling Green State University) and Carol 
Stabile (University of Oregon)

We invite contributions to a peer-reviewed open call issue featuring 
research on gender, new media and technology. We are particularly 
interested in contributions that exemplify Ada’s commitments to 
politically engaged, intersectional approaches to scholarship on gender, 
new media and technology.

Contributions in formats other than the traditional essay are 
encouraged; please contact the editors to discuss specifications and/or 
multimodal contributions.

*Submission Details*
All submissions should be sent by FEBRUARY 1, 2016 to 
editor at adanewmedia.org. Contributions should be no more than 5,000 
words, inclusive of notes and citations. Please attach your contribution 
as a word document and use “Ada Open Call Contribution” for your subject 
line and include the following in the body of your message:

•	Your name and a short biography
•	A 50 word abstract
•	A list of five keywords/subject tags
•	Preferred email address
•	Citation style used

*About Ada*
Ada is an online, open access, open source, peer-reviewed journal run by 
feminist media scholars. The journal’s first issue was published online 
in November 2012. Since that launch, Ada has received more than 200,000 
page views. Ada operates a review process that combines feminist 
mentoring with the rigor of peer review.

We do not — and will never — charge fees for publishing your materials, 
and we will share those materials using a Creative Commons License.

*About the Editors*
Radhika Gajjala [@cyberdivalivesl] is professor of media studies and 
American culture studies at Bowling Green State University, Ohio, where 
she teaches courses in global media, international communication, media 
and cultural studies and feminist research methods. She is the author of 
Cyberselves: Feminist Ethnographies of South Asian Women and of 
Cyberculture and the Subaltern: Weavings of the Virtual and Real. She 
has also co-edited South Asian Technospaces and Cyberfeminism 2.0 She is 
co-editor of Ada: A Journal of Gender, New Media, and Technology.

Carol A. Stabile [@castabile] is head of the Department of Women’s and 
Gender Studies at the University of Oregon, where she teaches 
interdisciplinary courses on gender, race, and class in media at the 
University of Oregon. She is the author of Feminism and the 
Technological Fix, editor of Turning the Century: Essays in Media and 
Cultural Studies, co-editor of Prime Time Animation: Television 
Animation and American Culture, and author of White Victims, Black 
Villains: Gender, Race, and Crime News in US Culture. She is completing 
a book on women writers and the broadcast blacklist in the 1950s, 
entitled The Broadcast 41: Women and the Television Blacklist. She is a 
founding member of Fembot, an online collaboration of scholars 
conducting research on gender, new media, and technology, co-editor of 
Ada: A Journal of Gender, New Media, and Technology, and edits the 
Feminist Media Studies book series for University of Illinois Press.

*Questions or Queries?*
Direct them to issue editors: editor at adanewmedia.org or to the Fembot 
Webmistress: shamid at uoregon.edu

---

Sarah T. Hamid

Web Mistress, The Fembot Collective
http://fembotcollective.org



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