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Call for Proposals
Title: Media on the Brain
I invite proposals for a collection of essays on the relationship
between recent advances in brain science and media studies. Drawing on
the spirit of the C.S. Snow’s Third Culture, this book seeks
interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary approaches to the production
and reception of cinema, television, Internet and other forms of
mediated communication that take into account new understandings of
how the embodied brain senses and interacts with its symbolic
environment. Moreover, as popular media shape perceptions of the
promises and limits of brain science, this volume also examines the
representation of neuroscience and cognitive psychology in mediated
culture.
The book is organized into two sections: the first examines how recent
advances in neuroscience and cognitive/social/evolutionary psychology
are transforming the fields of communication, media studies, and
audience/cultural theory. The second explores how brain science is
represented in popular media, and how that representation influences
conceptions of the brain, mind, and ontology of the real.
Essays may explore, but are not limited to, the following topics:
· Media environment theory and the ecological brain
· Cultivation theory and memory
· Uses and Gratifications theory and evolutionary psychology
· Mediated characters and social psychology
· Developmental psychology and media use
· Network models of communication and neural nets/computational
neuroscience
· Ideologies of neuroscience
· Media literacy and brain function
· Fiction television representation of brain disorders and treatment
· News reports on brain science
· Dramatizing brain science in criminal cases
· Representations of the brain in advertizing
· Use of brain imaging popular culture
· Neuroscientists as public intellectuals
Please submit proposals of 300-500 words with a brief biographical
statement and contact information via email attachment to Michael
Grabowski, Associate Professor of Communication, Manhattan College
(michael.grabowski@manhattan.edu) no later than October 15, 2012.
Completed essays for accepted proposals will be due by June 15, 2013.
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