Archive for the ‘Events’ Category

CFP: Transitions Comics Symposium 2013 at Birkbeck, London

July 1, 2013

Transitions is a one-day symposium promoting new research and multi-disciplinary academic study of comics/ comix/ manga/ bande dessinée and other forms of sequential art, now in its fourth year.

Saturday the 26th of October 2013

School of Arts, Birkbeck, University of London, London WC1E 7HX

Keynote: Dr. Ann Miller (University of Leicester, joint editor of European Comic Art)

Respondent: Dr. Roger Sabin (Central St. Martins, University of the Arts London)

Transitions is currently the only regular academic comics event based in London, and is part of Comica – The London International Comics Festival.  The symposium offers a platform where different perspectives and methodologies can be brought together and shared.  As an event devoted to promoting new research into comics in all their forms the symposium provides a forum for research from postgraduate students and early career lecturers.

Comics studies occupy a unique multi-disciplinary middle-space, one that encourages cross-disciplinary pollination and a convergence of distinct knowledges: literary and cultural studies, visual arts and media, modern languages, sociology, geography and more. By thinking about comics across different disciplines, we hope to stimulate and provoke debate and to address a wide spectrum of questions, to map new trends and provide a space for dialogue and further collaboration to emerge.

 

We welcome abstracts for twenty minute papers of 250 – 300 words.

Possible topics include, but are not limited to:

 International iterations: manga, bande dessinée , fumetti etc. – children’s comics – superheroes – non-fiction comics – the (im)materiality of comics – formalist approaches – cultural histories –adaptation/ remediation – autographics – early comics – comic strips – small press –alternative comics/ underground commix – comics narratologies – political comics – comics and cultural theory – contexts of production and circulation – audiences – comics and the archive – subjectivity in comics – graphic medicine – fan subcultures – comics as historiography – key creators…

 

Proposals for papers should be sent as Word documents, with a short biography appended. Abstracts should be submitted by the 30th of July 2013 to Hallvard, Tony and Nina at transitions.symposium@gmail.com.

 

CFP: European Fandom and Fan Studies: Localization and Translation Symposium, Amsterdam, 9th November 2013

June 27, 2013

European Fandom and Fan Studies: Localization and Translation
One Day Symposium, 9 November 2013
Amsterdam School for Cultural Analysis and
University of Amsterdam Department of Media Studies
Call for Papers
 
 
The increasingly global circulation of media often threatens to obscure local contexts of reception, identification, interpretation, and translation.  This one day symposium at the University of Amsterdam seeks to explore the state of Fan Studies and the variety of Fandoms focused within the social and geographical boundaries of Europe, particularly with regard to processes of localization and translation, broadly interpreted.  Inter-disciplinary papers are invited to explore the nature of the field itself, how different fandoms function within Europe, and how European fan cultures re-interpret, re-imagine, translate, and localize foreign media texts or foreign fan practices.  Potential avenues of exploration may include how Fan Studies is represented, studied, and received within European universities, by funding bodies and publishers.  Papers on fandoms may explore how European (English and non-English speaking) fans of European and non-European objects of fan appreciation participate in fandom, the differences between internet fandoms and local/national/international fan practices, and objects of fan appreciation that originate within Europe.
 
Topics of interest include but are not limited to:
 
-Regional fan histories.
-Negotiation between international and local fan infrastructures.
-Local and national adaptation of fan cultures and identities.
-European fans’ impact on international public policy and industry practice.
-Fans’ relationships to national media industries and public policy.
-National and transnational economies within fandom and/or fan studies.
-Crossing national, cultural, and language boundaries in fandom and fan studies.
-Translation, both linguistic and cultural.
-Fans’ local and international languages and economies of desire.
-Framing local European fan objects and cultures within fan studies.
-Processes of translation, adaptation, and localization in European fans’ interaction with global media.
 
 
The symposium is associated with a special issue of the journal of Transformative Works and Cultures tentatively slated for 2015, with full papers due January 1, 2014.

Event Details
The symposium will be held in the center of Amsterdam, easily accessible from Amsterdam international airport.
 
Submission Process
Please send a 300 word abstract along with a short (100 word) biographical note to Anne Kustritz (A.M.Kustritz@uva.nl) or Emma England (E.E.England@uva.nl) by 10 September.

CFP: Celebrity Studies Journal 2nd Bi-Annual Conference, London, June 2014

June 17, 2013

http://celebritystudiesconference.com

The 2nd Celebrity Studies Journal conference has now been announced!

It will take place at Royal Holloway, London, 19-21 June, 2014.

The conference is organised by James Bennett & Su Holmes and will feature the following Keynote Speakers:

  • Richard Dyer (Kings College, University of London)
  • Diane Negra (University College Dublin)
  • Sean Redmond (Deakin University, Melbourne)
  • Mandy Merck (Royal Holloway, University of London)

The conference will be themed around questions of methodology: ‘Approaching celebrity’.

Call for Papers:

We invite abstracts for individual 20minute papers or pre-constituted panels of 3 x 20minute papers that speak to this theme or on any topic in celebrity studies.

We also invite submissions for Pecha Kucha style presentations, either individually or as part of a pre-constituted panel of 3-4 speakers.  click here for more info.

PhD Competition

A travel bursary and fee waiver will be available to the best two abstract submissions (including abstracts for Pecha Kucha presentations).  click here for more info.

Deadline for abstracts: November 4th, 2013 (250 words, +50 word bio)

Successful abstracts notified by: December 6th, 2013

Enquiries/abstracts to: celebritystudies@gmail.com
A special issue of the best papers from the conference will be published in Celebrity Studies Journal in 2015. Possible topics include, but are not limited to:

  • Method: how to do celebrity studies
  • The celebrity studies canon
  • The value of fame
  • Celebrity and power
  • Star and celebrity images
  • Pop stardom
  • National cinema, international stars
  • The TV Personality
  • Celebrity and performance
  • Digital platforms
  • DIY celeb
  • Ordinary celebrity
  • Austerity and celebrity
  • American Quality TV
  • Entrepreneurial celebrity
  • Celebrity fandom
  • Literary celebrity
  • Queer celebrity
  • The celebrity ambassador
  • Fame damage
  • Celebrity affect, emotion
  • Celebrity and gender
  • Anti-celebrity
  • The phenomenology of celebrity
  • Cult stardom and celebrity
  • Charisma and celebrity
  • Pathology and celebrity
  • Toxic celebrity
  • Celebrity and news
  • The sexualisation of celebrity
  • Celebrity art/artists
  • Race, ethnicity and celebrity
  • Celebrity and persona
  • Porn stars
  • Sport and celebrity
  • Gaming and celebrity culture
  • Political fame
  • Celebrity’s right to privacy
  • Leveson inquiry and celebrity
  • Reality TV
  • Neoliberalism and celebrity

CFP: Exploring British Film and Television Stardom Conference, 2 November 2013 at Queen Mary, University of London, UK

June 15, 2013

Call for Papers

Exploring British Film and Television Stardom Conference

Saturday, 2 November 2013 at Queen Mary, University of London

Supported by Living British Cinema

Keynote speakers: Dr. Melanie Bell (Newcastle University) and

Dr. Andrew Spicer (University of the West of England)

While British cinema and television history are thriving fields of scholarship,the issue of stardom has been insufficiently explored in national terms, and most British star images suggest that the dominant Hollywood model, associated with individualism, glamour, and consumption, sits uneasily in a British cultural context.

A decade after groundbreaking work by Geoffrey Macnab, in Searching for Stars: Stardom and Acting in British Cinema, and Bruce Babington’s British Stars and Stardom: From Alma Taylor to Sean Connery, there are new directions in star studies to consider, including performance, fandom and transnational stardom. Has film stardom now been usurped by celebrity, calling into question Christine Gledhill’s assertion that cinema “still provides the ultimate confirmation of stardom”? Meanwhile, television in this period has been marked by the phenomenon of a wave of British stars, including Hugh Laurie, Dominic West, Idris Elba and Damien Lewis, who have been reimagined in American long-form drama, and by the recent international success of Downton Abbey.

This one-day conference seeks to explore British stardom from historical, cultural, industrial and contemporary perspectives and will be an unprecedented opportunity to study stars in a British context. The conference aims to explore the issues around media stardom and national identity in innovative and challenging ways.  We welcome proposals from established academics, postgraduates, and independent scholars in the field.

Possible topics include, but are not limited to:

•      Historical perspectives on British stardom (film, television, celebrity)

•      Genre and film stardom

•      Celebrity and British stardom

•      Audiences and fandom

•      Race, gender, class and ethnicity and British stardom

•      The international appeal of British stars

•      Transitions between media for British stars (film, theatre, television, music)

•      British stars abroad

•      Stardom and regional identity

•      Fashion and costume and British stardom

•      Auteurs and British film stars

•      Stardom and industrial contexts

Please submit proposals of no more than 300 words and a brief biography via email to the conference organisers, Adrian Garvey (a.garvey@qmul.ac.uk) and Julie Lobalzo Wright (julielwright1@gmail.com), by 24 June 2013.

CFP: Children, Childhood Studies, and Popular Culture, MAPACA Conference, Nov 2013

May 30, 2013

The Children and Childhood Studies Area of the Mid-Atlantic Popular and American Culture Association invites you to participate in the annual MAPACA conference. Papers in this area examine the impact of popular culture on children and childhood, as well as the role of children and young adults as influencers and creators of popular and American culture. Work from the world of Fan Studies would be most welcome in this area!
For this area, Fans need not be children. Adult fans of work that might be considered “for children” are of great interest. We’d love to hear about Bronies, adult fans of superheros, cartoons…

Single papers, panels, roundtables, and alternative formats are welcome. Proposals should take the form of 300-word abstracts. The deadline for submission is Friday, June 14, 2013. This year’s conference will be in Atlantic City, NJ, Nov. 7-9, 2013. For the complete call as well info on how to submit a proposal, please see http://mapaca.net/. Please direct any questions about the Children and Childhood Studies area to area chair Patrick Cox at ptcox@camden.rutgers.edu

MAPACA welcomes proposals on all aspects of popular and American Culture. For a list of MAPACA’s other areas and area chair contact information, visit Subject Areas. Fan Studies work would fit in many of them, and note there is a specific area for Fan Fiction. General questions can be directed to mapaca@mapaca.net

MAPACA is an inclusive professional organization dedicated to the study of popular and American culture in all their multi-disciplinary manifestations. The association is comprised of college and university faculty, independent scholars and artists, and graduate and undergraduate students. It is a regional division of the Popular Culture and American Culture Association, which, in the words of Popular Culture Association founder Ray Browne, is a “multi-disciplinary association interested in new approaches to the expressions, mass media and all other phenomena of everyday life.”

Call for Papers: Kick it! The Anthropology of European Football, Vienna, 25/26 October 2013

April 22, 2013

Call for Papers:

Kick it! The Anthropology of European Football

Vienna, 25/26 October 2013

Football is one of the most well-loved and most widely shared expressions of popular culture. But why does football have a social role that stretches way beyond the stadium? The international conference “The Anthropology of European Football” seeks to understand football’s impact on everyday lives and identity dynamics in Europe. Thereby, the football phenomenon is not only perceived as being related to class relations and subculture, but at the same time as a symbolic domain that produces social identities at various levels.

Therefore, we would welcome proposals for papers on any of the following research strands, but by no means confined to these areas:

• How are supporter and fan identities created in the everyday practices of football fan culture?

• How do globalisation, commercialisation, and migration exert an influence on football fan culture?

• What impact do Europeanisation and the increasing mobility of both supporters and players have on the self-perception of football fans?

• How is the “Other” created among fans? How are exclusion and inclusion practices enacted, narrated and reproduced?

• What cleavages and loyalties cross-cut European football, such as East vs. West and North vs. South, class, gender or politics?

Keynote lectures: Dr. Cornel Sandvoss (University of Surrey, UK) and Dr. Hani Zubida (The Max Stern Yezreel Valley College, Israel).

We invite papers from researchers at all stages of their career. We especially encourage applicants whose research is based on ethnographic fieldwork or those with an anthropological background.

Proposals should include an abstract of 300 words, the author’s institutional affiliation, contact details and a short biography (all on one page). The submission deadline is 10 May 2013. Successful applicants will be notified by the end of June, with registration for the conference being opened after that date. Selected papers will be published as part of a special issue of an academic journal or an edited volume.

The event is part of the interdisciplinary European research project FREE – Football Research in an Enlarged Europe (www.free-project.eu) funded by the European Commission’s 7th European Framework Programme for Research (FP7). The conference is organised within the scope of the anthropological research strand of the project by the Department of European Ethnology at the University of Vienna in collaboration with the Department of Cultural Anthropology and Ethnology at the Adam Mickiewicz University Poznań. Please contact the local conference organisers if you require further information as to this conference, or the research network generally: Alexandra Schwell (alexandra.schwell@univie.ac.at) and Nina Szogs (nina.szogs@univie.ac.at).

FREE consists of nine collaborating universities:
ESSCA School of Management, Københavns Universitet, Loughborough University, Middle East Technical University, Universität Stuttgart, Universität Wien, Universitat de València, Université de Franche-Comté, Uniwersytet im. Adama Mickiewicza

Please feel FREE to submit your proposal by 10 May 2013
to free@univie.ac.at.
FREE – Football Research in an Enlarged Europe is an FP7 project funded under Socio-economic Sciences and Humanities

CFP: Fan Studies, 2013 Midwest Popular Culture Association Conference, St Louis, MO. October 11-13, 2013

April 11, 2013

St. Louis Union Station Hotel, A Doubletree by Hilton
Deadline: April 30, 2012
Submissions.mpcaaca.org

Topics can include, but are not limited to fan fiction, multi-media fan production, fan communities, fandom of individual media texts, sports fandom, or the future of fandom. Case studies are also welcome.
Please upload 250 word abstract proposals on any aspect of Fan Studies to the Fan Studies area, http://submissions.mpcaaca.org/.
Any questions? Please email Paul Booth at pbooth@depaul.edu,
More information about the conference can be found at http://www.mpcaaca.org/
Please note the availability of graduate student travel grants: http://mpcaaca.org/conference/travel-grants/.

Please include name, affiliation, and e-mail address with the 250 word abstract. Also, please indicate in your submission whether your presentation will require an LCD Projector.

Registration Now Open: Sherlock Holmes: Past and Present 21-22 June 2013 Institute of English Studies, Senate House, University of London

April 9, 2013

Conference webpage: http://www.ies.sas.ac.uk/ies-events/conferences/SherlockHolmes

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SherlockHolmesPastAndPresent

This conference offers a serious opportunity to bring together academics, enthusiasts, creative practitioners and popular writers in a shared discussion about the cultural legacy of Sherlock Holmes. The Strand Magazine and the Sherlock Holmes stories contribute one of the most enduring paradigms for the production and consumption of popular culture in the twentieth- and the twenty-first centuries. The stories precipitated a burgeoning fan culture including various kinds of participation, wiki and crowd-sourcing, fan-fiction, virtual realities and role-play gaming. All of these had existed before but they were solidified, magnified and united by Sherlockians and Holmesians in entirely new ways and on scales never seen before. All popular culture phenomena that followed (from Lord of the Rings to Twilight via Star Trek) shared its viral pattern. This conference aims to unpick the historical intricacies of Holmesian fandom as well as offering a wide variety of perspectives upon its newest manifestations. This conference invites adaptors of and scholars on Holmes, late-Victorian writing, and popular culture internationally to contribute to this scholarly conversation. Our aims are to celebrate Conan Doyle’s achievement, to explore the reasons behind Holmes’ enduring popularity across different cultures and geographical spaces, and to investigate new directions in Holmes’ afterlife. This conference will precede Holmes’ 160th birthday in 2014 and launch a new volume of essays on Holmes co-edited by Dr. Jonathan Cranfield and Tom Ue, and form part of the larger celebrations in London and internationally.

This conference is generously supported by Blackwell’s Charing Cross Road; Intellect Books; MX Publishing; UCL Arts and Humanities, including the Faculty Institute of Graduate Studies; UCL English; UCL European Institute; and UCL Public Engagement Unit.  We thank Owen Jollands for contributing all of the artwork; Carol Bowen, Stephen Cadywold, Anita Garfoot, and James Phillips from UCL English for their administrative help; Jon Millington from the Institute of English Studies in the School of Advanced Study at the University of London for his; Laura Cream from UCL Public Engagement Unit; and Karen Attar for putting together the Conan Doyle display at Senate House Library.  We are grateful to David Grylls, Douglas Kerr, John Mullan, and the conference participants for their contributions.

Dr Who 50th Anniversary Celebration, 4 May 2013, De Paul University

April 5, 2013

The BBC television series Doctor Who has reached an historic milestone: 2013 marks the 50th anniversary of this vibrant and culturally relevant avant-garde science fiction series. In honor of this anniversary, and as a way of exploring the longevity of the series, the College of Communication and the Media and Cinema Studies program are hosting a day-long colloquium of scholars who will discuss in a public forum the critical, moral and ethical dilemmas depicted by the show.

“A Celebration of Doctor Who” is intended to spark debate and discussion about changing morals and ethics over the half century of the show’s presence on television, in print, on the radio and in films. Some topics that we will explore include: how does Doctor Who celebrate the minority? In what ways does Doctor Who articulate a notion of a utopian society? How does this mainstream text represent marginalized members of society (including people of different races, sexualities, the disabled, the impoverished, and other minorities in society)? In what ways does the Doctor Who fan audience counter the discourse of the marginalized in our culture?

A series of scholarly roundtables will bring together academics from the area to discuss the cultural context of Doctor Who. These roundtables will offer the audience of students and scholars the chance to engage in a deeply intellectual environment with the themes of the show over its fifty-year history. We hope to encourage papers which explore issues such as: race and representation in Doctor Who; the use of religion in the show; disability as depicted in the show and in the fandom; gender and sexuality in the show; the role of academia in developing understanding of the meaning of the show; the marginalization of people and activities; analysis of how production details affect a show’s meaning; the underlying ideology of global television. Additionally, because Doctor Who is a British television program, it brings with it a wealth of international pluralism. This colloquium is intended to spark debate about the nature of contemporary television across borders, times and eras.

Guest of Honor:
Writer Robert Shearman will be our keynote speaker. He will screen his Hugo-nominated Doctor Who episode “Dalek,” after which he’ll participate in an hour-long Q&A. (www.robertshearman.net)

Announced Participants (with more TBA):

Carole Barrowman
Carole Emily Barrowman is professor of English and Director of Creative Studies in Writing at Alverno College, Milwaukee, Wisconsin and a reviewer and crime fiction columnist for the Milwaukee Sentinel. She is also known for her writing contributions with younger brother (and Doctor Who star) John Barrowman. She is the author or co-author of Anything Goes, I Am What I Am, Hollow Earth, Exodus Code, and Bone Quill. (www.carolebarrowman.com/)

Derek Kompare
Derek Kompare is an Associate Professor in the Division of Film and Media Arts at Southern Methodist University (SMU). His research interests focus on media formations, i.e., how particular media forms and institutions coalesce and develop. He has written articles on television history and form for several anthologies and journals, and is the author of Rerun Nation: How Repeats Invented American Television, and a study of CSI: Crime Scene Investigation. At SMU, Derek teaches courses on media aesthetics, media theory, media history, media globalization, comics, video games, crime television and science fiction.

Scott Paeth
Scott Paeth is an Assistant Professor in Religious Studies, Peace, Justice, and Conflict series at DePaul University. He studies Business ethics, bioethics, ethics of war and peace. (las.depaul.edu/pax/People/ScottPaethPhD/index.asp)

Lars Pearson
Lars Pearson is the owner of Mad Norwegian Press, publishers of science fiction and sci-fi analysis books. He has co-written A History, a History of the Universe as Told Through Doctor Who. (madnorwegian.com/)

Lynne Thomas
Lynne Thomas is the co-editor of Chicks Dig Time Lords, a collection of essays about Doctor Who and the women who love it. She is the curator of Rare Books and Special Collections for Northern Illinois University Libraries. She has won two Hugo Awards. (www.niutoday.info/2012/09/19/lynne-m-thomas-wins-second-hugo-award/)

Paul Booth
Paul Booth is an assistant professor of Digital Communication and Media Arts in the College of Communication. He is the author of Digital Fandom: New Media Studies, which examines fans of cult television programs. He has also published articles in Communication Studies, Transformative Works and Culture, Television and New Media, Critical Studies in Media Communication, New Media and Culture, and in the books Transgression 2.0, American Remakes of British Television, and Battlestar Galactica and Philosophy. His newest book, Time on TV: Temporal Displacement and Mashup Television, was published in May, 2012. Paul is currently editing a book collection about Doctor Who fandom and has been a Doctor Who fan since he can remember.

For more information on the day-long Doctor Who symposium, please visit the event page, and be sure to note that you’ll be attending.

http://events.depaul.edu/event/a_celebration_of_doctor_who#.URu7IqVkhY5

https://www.facebook.com/events/158556054301429/

Dr Who May 2013 - Draft 5

CFP: Diversity in Speculative Fiction, Loncon 3, London, 14-18 August 2014

March 8, 2013

Diversity in Speculative Fiction

Loncon 3, Call for Papers

72nd World Science Fiction Convention

Thursday 14 to Monday 18 August 2014

London, UK

http://loncon3.org/

Guests of Honour:

Iain M. Banks, John Clute, Malcolm Edwards, Chris Foss,

Jeanne Gomoll, Robin Hobb, Bryan Talbot

The academic programme at Loncon 3, the 72nd World Science Fiction Convention, is offering the opportunity for academics from across the globe to share their ideas with their peers and convention attendees. To reflect the history and population of London, the host city, the theme of the academic programme is ‘Diversity’. We will be exploring science fiction, fantasy, horror, and all forms of speculative fiction, whether in novels, comics, television, and movies or in fanworks, art, radio plays, games, advertising, and music.

Proposals are particularly welcome on the works of the Guests of Honour, the city of London as a location and/or fantastic space, and underrepresented areas of research in speculative fiction. Examples of these may include, but are not limited to:

– Representation of alternative sexualities

– Speculative fiction by writers and producers of colour

– Non-English language media and/or fandoms

– The fantastic in unexpected places (greetings cards, pornography, opera, football stadiums)

– Digital comics

– The role of speculative fiction in Live Action Role-Playing

– The fantastic in music videos

– Speculative fiction in advertising

– European horror

Academics at all levels are warmly encouraged, including students and independent scholars.

We welcome proposals for presentations, roundtable discussions, lectures, and workshops/masterclasses.

The deadline for submission is October 1st 2013. Participants will be notified by December 31st 2013. All presenters must be in receipt of convention membership by May 1st 2014. Abstracts will be included in the Academic Programme Book, available to download from the Loncon website. It is anticipated that an edited volume showcasing the variety of topics presented will be published.

To propose a paper, please submit a 300 word abstract. To submit something other than a paper, please get in touch with Emma England, the academic area head, for an informal exchange of ideas.

emma.england (at) loncon3.org

Twitter: @AcademicLoncon3

 


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