Archive for the ‘Events’ Category

CFP: Politics and Law of Doctor Who symposium, Westminster University, UK, 5th September 2014

January 7, 2014

Centre for Law, Society and Popular Culture

Westminster Law School

The politics and law of Doctor Who

 

Symposium Announcement and First Call for Papers 

Friday 5th September 2014

University of Westminster

 

Doctor Who is the BBC’s longest-running drama television series and the world’s longest-running science fiction series.  The massive public attention devoted to the show’s 50th anniversary and to its choice of new lead actor confirms that the programme merits serious academic attention.  Politics, law and constitutional questions often feature prominently in Doctor Who stories, whether in the form of the Time Lords’ guardianship of the universe, the Doctor’s encounters with British Prime Ministers, or the array of governance arrangements in Dalek society.   The show’s politics is also an adventure through time, from the internationalising moralism of the Barry Letts-Terrance Dicks years, the dark satire of Andrew Cartmel’s period as script editor and the egalitarianism of the Russell T. Davies era.  Yet the politics and law of Doctor Who have yet to be the subject of wide-ranging scholarship.  Proposals for 20 minute papers are therefore invited for a symposium on 5thSeptember 2014, to be held in the University of Westminster’s historic Regent Street building just metres away from BBC headquarters.  Possible subjects for papers might include, but are by no means limited to:

  • Doctor Who’s ideology
  • The Doctor’s political morality
  • Comparison of politics of Doctor Who with politics of other science fiction
  • The merits/demerits of Harriet Jones as Prime Minister
  • Doctor Who and devolution
  • Portrayals of British sovereigns in Doctor Who
  • Doctor Who’s politics of class, gender and sexuality
  • Fan responses to “political” Doctor Who stories
  • International law, intergalactic law and non-interference
  • Globalisation and corporate domination
  • Satire in Doctor Who
  • Politics and law in audio adventures, comic books and novels
  • War crimes and genocide
  • The politics of UNIT and Torchwood
  • The will of villains to secure power
  • Political history and political nostalgia in Doctor Who
  • Doctor Who’s construction of British national identity

 

Abstracts should be 250 words in length, and should be accompanied by a 100-word biography of the author.  Abstracts should be sent to nicold@wmin.ac.uk – deadline for receipt of abstracts 17 January 2014.

Call for Papers and Topic Proposals: Joss Whedon: A Celebration, DePaul University, Chicago 3rd May 2014

December 12, 2013

Call for Papers and Topic Proposals:
Joss Whedon: A Celebration

Now accepting submissions and ideas for the second annual Pop Culture Colloquium at DePaul University in Chicago!

The Media and Cinema Studies program at DePaul University is hosting a one-day celebratory colloquium in honor of the work of Joss Whedon on Saturday, May 03, from 9-6. This event will feature roundtable discussions from scholars and fans of Whedon, speaking about his cultural impact, as well as analyzing aspects of his television shows and films. The even will also feature special guests, screenings, screenwriting workshops, and (perhaps) a sing-a-long or two…

The audience for this event is both graduate and undergraduate students, both fans and scholars, and the focus should be on informed and enlightening discussion rather than formal academic papers. “Joss Whedon: A Celebration” will take place on DePaul’s Loop campus.

If you’re interested in speaking on a round table, please send a 200 word abstract of your topic and a CV or resume to Paul Booth (pbooth@depaul.edu) by Mar 15. Also please email Dr. Booth with any questions. We hope that you will be able to join in the discussion and celebration!

 

FSN Symposium 2013 Video

December 9, 2013

The very first Fan Studies Network Symposium, held at the UEA on 30th November 2013, was a great success. Thanks to all those who attended, presented papers, or gave us support over Twitter on the day!

We were delighted to have Emily from SeaMe.tv in attendance, filming panels and talking to attendees. SeaMe.tv has produced an excellent video summarising the day. You can view it embedded below.

CFP: “Football fans and their support to national teams” conference – 5-6 MAY 2014 – BRUSSELS

November 13, 2013

In June 2014, Brazil will host the 20th Football World Cup. Since it takes place every four years, this planetary mega event is a valuable tool to gauge the assertion of national and local identities. It is also a good opportunity for supporters to stir – or moderate – dissent, thus playing a buffer role between the national team and the political community. The ULB research group on sport is organising an international and interdisciplinary conference in Social Science to better understand the issues relating to “football fans and their support to national teams”. The question of “football fandom” has been the subject of numerous studies in Social Science, especially regarding topics such as the politicisation of football passions (Bromberger, 1995; Cano, 2001), identification (Smith, 2002; Giulianotti & Armstrong, 1997; Lestrelin, 2012), social integration or relation to violence (Alabarces, 2003; Dunning, 1982). However, most of these studies deal with football fandom through the prism of local teams, while issues raised by supporterism at a national level have been addressed only minimally.

These issues are nonetheless numerous: Who supports the national team? What relationships do they maintain with other groups of supporters (domestic or foreign)? How are their different levels of adherence and commitment articulated and prioritised? What are the time frames and areas of national supporterism? To what extent do they contribute to the consolidation of a national identity? Etc. …
Moreover, the study of national supporterism in football opens the door for comparative studies and encourages disciplinary exchanges (history, sociology, anthropology, political science)

The ULB research center CEVIPOL will hold an international conference on these topics.

Deadline for submission: November 15, 2013 The people having sent their proposal will be informed about the outcome of the selection process.

Working languages: English and French

Please send your proposal with the title of the presentation, a 1500-character (including spaces) summary, and a brief biographical statement to : jmdewael@ulb.ac.be

Appel à contribution – Colloque International

«Le supportérisme des équipes nationales de football» / 5-6 MAI 2014 – BRUXELLES

En juin 2014, le Brésil accueillera la vingtième Coupe du monde de football. Tous les quatre ans, cet événement planétaire est une formidable caisse de résonnance pour l’affirmation des identités nationales, voire locales. C’est également l’occasion pour les supporters d’attiser – ou de résorber – des dissensus, et donc de jouer un rôle-tampon entre l’équipe nationale et la communauté politique. Le groupe de recherche sur le sport de l’ULB, organise un colloque international et pluridisciplinaire en sciences sociales afin de mieux saisir les enjeux du « supportérisme des équipes nationales de football ». La question du « supportérisme » dans le football a déjà fait l’objet de nombreux travaux en sciences sociales, notamment en ce qui concerne la politisation des passions sportives (Bromberger 1995, Cano 2001), les logiques identitaires (Smith 2002, Giulianotti & Armstrong, 1997; Lestrelin, 2012), les processus d’intégration sociale ou encore le rapport à la violence (Alabarces 2003; Dunnings, 1995). Mais la grande majorité de ces travaux questionnent le supportérisme au prisme des clubs de footballs. Au niveau des équipes nationales, les enjeux soulevés par le supportérisme n’ont été que très peu traités.

Les problématiques sont pourtant nombreuses : Qui sont les supporters des équipes nationales? Quelles relations entretiennent-ils avec les autres groupes de supporters (nationaux et étrangers)? Comment articulent-ils et hiérarchisent-ils leurs différents niveaux d’engagement ? Quelles sont les temporalités et les espaces du supportérisme national? Dans quelle mesure les supporters contribuent-ils à cimenter un sentiment d’appartenance nationale? Etc.
L’étude du supportérisme national dans le football ouvre par ailleurs la porte à des travaux comparatifs et à de stimulants échanges disciplinaires (histoire, sociologie, anthropologie, science politique, etc.).

Le CEVIPOL de l’Université libre de Bruxelles organisera une conférence sur ce sujet.

Date limite d’envoi des propositions : 15 novembre 2013 Les personnes ayant soumis une proposition seront tenues informées des résultats de la procédure de sélection.

Langues de travail : français et anglais.

Proposition avec le titre de la présentation, un résumé de 1.500 signes et une brève présentation biographique à envoyer à : jmdewael@ulb.ac.be

CFP: Sex and the City Ten Years On: Landmark Television and its Legacy conference, University of Roehampton, London, Friday April 4 2014

November 13, 2013

‘Sex and the City Ten Years On: Landmark Television and its Legacy’

Conference at the University of Roehampton, London, Friday April 4 2014
Abstract deadline – November 17 2013

2014 will mark ten years since the final episode of Sex and the City (HBO 1998-2004) was broadcast. ‘Sex and the City Ten Years On: Landmark Television and its Legacy’ will mark this anniversary by revisiting the lasting influence of the series, its cultural circulation today, its relationship with subsequent series and impact on the medium of television. Topics for papers may include, but are not limited to:

–       SATC in translation and transnational contexts
–       SATC in syndication and the contexts of HBO/cable v network television
–       SATC and adaptation (newspaper column to ‘novel’ to TV series to film)
–       The reception of, and controversies surrounding, the SATC movies
–       Television and postfeminism
–       Fashion television
–       Television and authorship
–       The relationship between SATC and subsequent women-centred series (eg The L Word; Desperate Housewives; Mistresses; Girls)
–       Television and stardom
–       Queer television
–       TV and genre/generic hybridity
–       Magazine and newspaper journalism and popular television
–       Reception, fandom and anti-fandom
–       Recontextualising SATC in the recession
–       Television and consumerism
–       Television and taboo
–       Women and comedy
–       Television, NYC and representations of urban space

Any enquiries, and abstracts of approx. 300 words with a brief biog, should be sent to Deborah Jermyn at d.jermyn@roehampton.ac.uk<mailto:d.jermyn@roehampton.ac.uk>  by November 17th.

CFP: 5th Edinburgh International Film Audience Conference (EIFAC), 27th – 28th March 2014, Edinburgh

November 13, 2013

** Call for Papers for the 5th Edinburgh International Film Audience Conference (EIFAC), 27th – 28th March 2014, Edinburgh **

Edinburgh International Film Audience Conference (EIFAC) returns in 2014 with a new conference team but still upholding its predecessors’  focus on exciting audience research taking place within academic film studies and within the film industry. The two-day conference will shine the spotlight on film cultures and film audiences by showcasing an expanding pool of scholarship, which moves away from classical textual modes of research to include empirical fieldwork. The event will debate how different methodologies and perspectives can help further our understanding of the most important people in the world of film – the audience. There is a lot to be learned from other subject areas, therefore, this year sees the call for papers reach out to non-film disciplines by encouraging scholars in television and game studies to share their empirical research.The conference has been praised for creating an arena where new and experienced researchers in academia can come together to share their enthusiasm for audience research in a friendly and supportive environment. Whilst the conference may well appeal primarily to academics, it invites contribution from those working in the film industries (production, distribution, exhibition, policy-making).

** Papers **
All papers should be concerned with empirical research on screen audiences. We are particularly interested in papers that explore the following issues/themes, however, we also welcome papers on other interesting topics:

– The challenges facing the empirical researcher
– Film festival audiences and communities
– Statistical literacy in empirical research
– Researching child and youth audiences
– Rethinking cinephilia, developing audience taxonomies
– Contemporary cinema audiences
– Film, fandom and merchandise
– Cult film and cult audiences
– Digital and online film cultures
– Transnational film audiences
– Film exhibition and the construction of audience
– Film policy and audiences
– Exhibition and/or consumption of short film
– Empirical research methods in television studies
– Empirical research methods in game studies
– Work in Progress

We continue to offer a showcase for work in progress. This is a great opportunity for Masters and PhD students to share research they are working on and receive helpful feedback from their peers. This work will be displayed in our social area throughout the conference in either printed poster or electronic poster format (a short PowerPoint slide show or similar multimedia format).

THE CFP DEADLINE IS: 5pm on Friday 29th November 2013

** Submitting Abstracts **
Paper proposals should include title, abstract, 3-5 key bibliographical references, and the name/s of the presenter/s and institutional affiliation/s, which collectively should be no more than 300 words. We also ask potential presenters to include a short biography (maximum 100 words).  Work in progress proposals should include title, short abstract, 2 key bibliographical references, and the name of the presenter and institutional affiliation, which should collectively be no more than 200 words. We also ask work in progress presenters to include a short biography (maximum 50 words).

Abstracts should be submitted as virus-free Word or rtf attachments to Ana Moraes (abstracts@filmaudiencesconference.co.uk) no later than 5pm on Friday 29th November 2013.  Please note the category you are submitting for in the email subject line (‘Paper Proposal’ or ‘Work in Progress Proposal’). External referees will review abstracts and all contributors will be notified of the outcome by early January 2014. Abstracts that are longer than prescribed will not be considered.

We differ from many other conferences by providing delegates with copies of all papers. Therefore, we require papers all papers in advance of the conference by 5pm on Friday 14th March 2014. If you are unable to commit to this date, we ask that you do not submit an abstract. Further details of the final paper submission process will be sent to successful presenters.

For more information visit: http://www.filmaudiencesconference.co.uk
A printable version of the CfP is available here: http://www.filmaudiencesconference.co.uk/images/eifac2014_cfp.pdf
Abstracts to be submitted to: abstracts@filmaudiencesconference.co.uk

CFP: The Politics and Law of Doctor Who, University of Westminster, UK, 5th September 2014

October 28, 2013

The politics and law of Doctor Who

 Symposium Announcement and First Call for Papers

 Friday 5th September 2014

University of Westminster

Doctor Who is the BBC’s longest-running drama television series and the world’s longest-running science fiction series.  The massive public attention devoted to the show’s 50th anniversary and to its choice of new lead actor confirms that the programme merits serious academic attention.  Politics, law and constitutional questions often feature prominently in Doctor Who stories, whether in the form of the Time Lords’ guardianship of the universe, the Doctor’s encounters with British Prime Ministers, or the array of governance arrangements in Dalek society.   The show’s politics is also an adventure through time, from the internationalising moralism of the Barry Letts-Terrance Dicks years, the dark satire of Andrew Cartmel’s period as script editor and the egalitarianism of the Russell T. Davies era.  Yet the politics and law of Doctor Who have yet to be the subject of wide-ranging scholarship.  Proposals for 20 minute papers are therefore invited for a symposium on 5th September 2014, to be held in the University of Westminster’s historic Regent Street building just metres away from BBC headquarters.  Possible subjects for papers might include, but are by no means limited to:

  • Doctor Who’s ideology
  • The Doctor’s political morality
  • Comparison of politics of Doctor Who with politics of other science fiction
  • The merits/demerits of Harriet Jones as Prime Minister
  • Doctor Who and devolution
  • Portrayals of British sovereigns in Doctor Who
  • Doctor Who’s politics of class, gender and sexuality
  • Fan responses to “political” Doctor Who stories
  • International law, intergalactic law and non-interference
  • Globalisation and corporate domination
  • Satire in Doctor Who
  • Politics and law in audio adventures, comic books and novels
  • War crimes and genocide
  • The politics of UNIT and Torchwood
  • The will of villains to secure power
  • Political history and political nostalgia in Doctor Who
  • Doctor Who’s construction of British national identity

Abstracts should be 250 words in length, and should be accompanied by a 100-word biography of the author.  Abstracts should be sent to nicold@wmin.ac.uk – deadline for receipt of abstracts 17 January 2014.

Fan Studies Network 2013 Symposium programme

October 28, 2013

Dear all,

We are delighted to announce the programme for the very first Fan Studies Network symposium, hosted by the School of Political, Social and International Studies at the University of East Anglia, Norwich, on Saturday 30th November 2013.

You can find the programme here:
https://fanstudies.wordpress.com/fan-studies-network-symposium-2013/

The event will begin with a keynote from Professor Matt Hills (Aberystwyth University).

Featuring an international cohort of over 30 speakers, there will be themed panels on spaces and performance, transculture, gender, “classic” fandoms, textualities, and celebrity. There will also be a participatory “speed geeking” session, featuring a number of scholars sharing research in its early stages.

Registration is open until Monday November 18th 2013. Cost: £16.75/£37.75 Unwaged/Waged. You can register on the symposium website:http://www.uea.ac.uk/politics-international-media/events/fan-studies-network-symposium and talk about the event on Twitter using #FSN2013.

All are welcome!

Call for Papers: Producers and Audiences Conference, Lund University, Sweden, March 20th 2014.

October 28, 2013

Call for Papers: Producers and Audiences

International Conference

Media and Communication Research, Lund University, Sweden, March 20th 2014.Organisers Professor Annette Hill, Dr Tina Askanius, Joanna Doona and Carolina Martinez.

Media production and culture are intricately connected. Producers create, produce, distribute and sell content, formats and brands for international audiences.  We engage and disengage with creative content, formats and brands, as publics, viewers, listeners, fans, consumers and participants. And media producers and audiences can switch roles, leading a double life as creators and consumers, producers and users. Yet despite these connections, production and audience studies traditionally remain separate spheres. Recent developments in the business of media and cultural industries highlight shifts in production, distribution, economics and cultural experiences across a range of content from television, film, radio, music, print, digital and mobile media. How can production and audience research allow space for broader questions about culture and our engagement with it? This conference explores challenges for production and audience research, theory and practice. The aim is to examine the complex interplay between production and culture in global, political, industrial and social contexts.

The conference follows three areas of enquiry in media, communication and cultural studies: relations between producers and audiences; theories, methods and practices; and creative content for contemporary mediascapes. Areas of research enquiry include:

1.     Political, social, economic and cultural relations between producers and audiences

2.     Production and audience theories, methods and practices

3.     Empirical research in production and/or culture across diverse genres and content, including television, film, radio, music, print, digital and mobile media

4.     Fans and anti-fans

5.     International formats for global audiences

The schedule includes a combination of keynote addresses, pre-constituted panels, and open panels. Confirmed speakers include Professor John Corner (Leeds University, UK), Professor Peter Dahlgren (Lund University, Sweden), Julie Donovan (International Formats Consultant), Professor Annette Hill (Lund University, Sweden) Professor Vicki Mayer (Tulane University, USA), Jane Roscoe (Head of International Content for SBS Australia), Professor Jeanette Steemers (University of Westminster, UK), Douglas Wood (Head of Research, Shine Group).

Please submit abstracts of 300 words in English by December 9th 2013 topac2014@kom.lu.se. For further information please consult our websitewww.kom.lu.se/pac2014. There is a registration fee of 650 SEK (70 Euros) that covers food and drink for the day and an evening buffet.

CFP: Slayage Conference on the Whedonverses, June 19-22, 2014, California State University-Sacramento.

October 12, 2013

Slayage: The Journal of the Whedon Studies Association (slayageonline.com), the Whedon Studies Association, and co-conveners Rhonda V. Wilcox and Tanya R. Cochran solicit your proposal for the sixth biennial Slayage Conference on the Whedonverses (SCW6). This conference dedicated to the imaginative universe(s) of Joss Whedon—the Jossverse(s) or Whedonverse(s)—will be held on the campus of California State University-Sacramento, Sacramento, California, June 19-22, 2014. The university’s Alyson Buckman and Susan Fanetti are serving as local arrangements chairs.

We welcome a proposal of 200-300 words (or an abstract of a completed paper) on any aspect of Whedon’s television and web texts (Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Angel, Firefly, Serenity, Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog, Dollhouse, Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D; his films (Serenity, The Cabin in the Woods, Marvel’s The Avengers, Much Ado About Nothing); his comics (e.g. Fray, Astonishing X-Men, Runaways, Sugarshock!, Buffy the Vampire Slayer Season Eight and Season Nine); or any element of the work of Whedon and his collaborators. Additionally, a proposal may address paratexts, fandoms, or Whedon’s extracurricular—political and activist— activities, such as his involvement with Equality Now. We invite presentations from the perspective of any discipline: literature, history, communications, film and television studies, women’s studies, religion, linguistics, music, cultural studies, and others. In other words, multidisciplinary discussions of the text, the social context, the audience, the producers, the production, and more are all appropriate. Your proposal/abstract should demonstrate familiarity with already-published scholarship in the field, which includes dozens of books, hundreds of articles, and over a dozen years of the blind, peer-reviewed journal Slayage.

This gathering will mark the 10th anniversary of the first Slayage Conference. As a result, we are planning several special events and guests and giving particular attention to connections among Whedon and his collaborators, his works, and social activism.

An individual paper is strictly limited to a reading time of 20 minutes, and we encourage, though do not require, self-organized panels of three presenters. Proposals for workshops, roundtables, or other types of sessions are also welcome. Fill out the appropriate Word form provided on the Slayage website (slayageonline.com) and send as an email attachment. Submissions by graduate and undergraduate students are invited; undergraduates should provide the name, email, and phone number of a faculty member willing to consult with them (the faculty member does not need to attend). Please submit your proposal to Rhonda V. Wilcox and Tanya R. Cochran at <slayage.conference@gmail.com>. Submissions must be received by January 19, 2014. Decisions will be made by March 1, 2014.

Proposals must be submitted by January 19, 2014.


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