CFP: Special Issue of the Journal of Popular Television

Special Issue of Journal of Popular Television

Themed Issue: Extreme Reality TV

Co-Editors: Julie Anne Taddeo and Ken Dvorak (co-editors of The Tube Has Spoken: Reality TV & History, UPK, 2009).

The popular success of reality TV has prompted its producers to seek even more extreme and taboo subject matter, from individuals confessing addictions to eating diapers (My Strange Addiction, TLC) to those engaging in the swinging lifestyle (Secret Sex Lives: Swingers, Discovery Health). Has reality TV become the latest incarnation of the “freak show,” titillating viewers, or do these programs help to educate them, normalizing the extreme?

The focus for this special issue is to define what sets the “extreme” apart from other types of reality TV; how do programs that showcase extreme behaviors, bodies, and lifestyles interrogate social/political/cultural concerns? the journal welcomes contributions on American and international reality TV programs; authors must explain how they represent “extreme” in its various manifestations. The journal especially welcomes submissions that examine “transmedia storytelling” that encourages viewers to explore additional content provided by social and traditional media outlets.

Deadline for 1,000-word abstract: July 30, 2014.

If accepted, 6,500 word essays will be due Nov. 30, 2014.

Acceptance is conditional, upon peer review, and must follow Intellect Style guidelines.

Contacts:

Julie Taddeo: taddeo@umd.edu

Ken Dvorak: krdvorak@gmail.com