CALL: New Book Series From The MIT Press

JB
Joshua Braun
Mon, Oct 1, 2018 2:17 PM

We are pleased to announce a new book series with The MIT Press, Distribution
Matters.

We welcome proposals and inquiries from scholars on this list and hope you will
spread the word. For further information, please contact the series editors,
Josh Braun and Ramon Lobato (details below and at
https://distributionmatters.net).

Many Thanks,
Josh and Ramon

DISTRIBUTION MATTERS
A new MIT Press book series

Distribution Matters explores how media content, ideas, and information move
through the world — and to what effect.

Distribution networks — from postal services to social media platforms — affect
in essential ways who has access to cultural resources, and on what terms. The
Distribution Matters book series explores the impact of strategies, business
models, and infrastructures for distribution across the media industries,
including screen, print, broadcast, and digital media. It seeks to publish
cutting-edge, critical scholarship that offers new ways to understand the
movement of media through time and space.

The series is open to media scholars within a range of humanities and social
science fields, including media studies, communication history, anthropology,
sociology, science and technology studies, internet studies, and cultural
studies. We welcome proposals from scholars whose work explores how access to
cultural resources is variously enabled, constrained, choreographed, and
contested in and through distribution. Potential topics include, but are not
limited to:

  • the histories of media distribution networks, their path dependencies, and
      social consequences
  • distribution dynamics within particular sectors, such as games, video,
      publishing, and advertising
  • logics of digital distribution (platformization, aggregation, recommendation,
      filtering, blocking, etc.)
  • governance and regulation of distribution networks
  • theoretical debates about circulation, networks, mobility, virality, and other
      issues everyday working practices and cultures of distribution
  • informal distribution and piracy

For further information, please contact the editors:

Dr Joshua Braun (University of Massachusetts Amherst) - jabraun@journ.umass.edu
Dr Ramon Lobato (RMIT University, Australia) - ramon.lobato@rmit.edu.au

More information and a printable version of this flyer are available at
https://distributionmatters.net/.

--
Josh Braun, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Journalism Studies
Journalism Department
University of Massachusetts Amherst

@josh_braun
Skype: wideaperture
http://wideaperture.net/
book: http://yalebooks.com/book/9780300197501/program-brought-you

"Maybe the only gift is a chance to inquire, to know nothing for certain. An inheritance of wonder and nothing more."
William Least Heat-Moon

We are pleased to announce a new book series with The MIT Press, Distribution Matters. We welcome proposals and inquiries from scholars on this list and hope you will spread the word. For further information, please contact the series editors, Josh Braun and Ramon Lobato (details below and at https://distributionmatters.net). Many Thanks, Josh and Ramon DISTRIBUTION MATTERS A new MIT Press book series Distribution Matters explores how media content, ideas, and information move through the world — and to what effect. Distribution networks — from postal services to social media platforms — affect in essential ways who has access to cultural resources, and on what terms. The Distribution Matters book series explores the impact of strategies, business models, and infrastructures for distribution across the media industries, including screen, print, broadcast, and digital media. It seeks to publish cutting-edge, critical scholarship that offers new ways to understand the movement of media through time and space. The series is open to media scholars within a range of humanities and social science fields, including media studies, communication history, anthropology, sociology, science and technology studies, internet studies, and cultural studies. We welcome proposals from scholars whose work explores how access to cultural resources is variously enabled, constrained, choreographed, and contested in and through distribution. Potential topics include, but are not limited to: * the histories of media distribution networks, their path dependencies, and   social consequences * distribution dynamics within particular sectors, such as games, video,   publishing, and advertising * logics of digital distribution (platformization, aggregation, recommendation,   filtering, blocking, etc.) * governance and regulation of distribution networks * theoretical debates about circulation, networks, mobility, virality, and other   issues everyday working practices and cultures of distribution * informal distribution and piracy For further information, please contact the editors: Dr Joshua Braun (University of Massachusetts Amherst) - jabraun@journ.umass.edu Dr Ramon Lobato (RMIT University, Australia) - ramon.lobato@rmit.edu.au More information and a printable version of this flyer are available at <https://distributionmatters.net/>. -- Josh Braun, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Journalism Studies Journalism Department University of Massachusetts Amherst @josh_braun Skype: wideaperture http://wideaperture.net/ book: http://yalebooks.com/book/9780300197501/program-brought-you "Maybe the only gift is a chance to inquire, to know nothing for certain. An inheritance of wonder and nothing more." William Least Heat-Moon