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[ecrea] Call for Proposals: International Conference on Asian Culture Industries, Bangalore
Tue Aug 03 09:21:41 GMT 2010
>Call for Papers
>
>International Conference on Asian Culture Industries:
>
>A Comparative Study of India, Japan and South Korea
>
>21st December 2010 22nd December 2010, Bangalore
>
>
>
>The Culture: Industries and Diversity in Asia
>(CIDASIA) research programme of CSCS invites
>proposals for papers at the International
>Conference on Asian Culture Industries to be
>held in Bangalore on 21st and 22nd December
>2010. The conference is supported by Japan Foundation, New Delhi.
>
>
>
>We invite scholars working on cinema,
>television, pop music, animation, gaming, in
>Asia in general and India, Japan and South Korea
>in particular to send in their proposals. We
>also welcome proposals from researchers working
>on the recent history of entertainment
>industries and government policy towards in these industries.
>
>
>
>The primary intention of the conference is to
>explore the possibility of comparative studies
>of entertainment industries in Asia. We focus on
>India, Japan and South Korea as a convenient
>starting point. The conference would like to
>examine the two way movement of cultural
>commodities in and out of these countries.
>Papers on the reception of cultural forms from
>these countries in other Asian locations too are
>welcome. We are not interested in papers devoted
>to detailed analyses of specific cultural texts.
>
>
>
>The culture industries of the countries under
>consideration have been largely inward looking
>for much of the post-colonial and post-imperial
>period. In the second half of the twentieth
>century they developed on the strength/weakness
>of their domestic markets, unlike Hong Kong
>which has a long and unbroken history of
>producing films for export. The conference will
>focus on the post-1990 period when for different
>reasons including underground circulation of
>cultural commodities in international markets,
>systematic efforts began to be made in these
>countries to export entertainment.
>
>
>
>The export of entertainment by Asian countries
>is coeval with the increasing economic
>importance of cultural production and
>consumption in todays world. In India, for
>example, government agencies have estimated that
>cultural and creative industries contribute up
>to 34% of the GDP and employ 30% of the
>workforce. The circulation of cultural
>commodities in contexts other than those of
>their production draws attention to the hitherto
>under-researched area, namely the increased
>interface between culture and economics. In a
>global context where cultural production and
>consumption are engines of the economy, the
>manner in which cultural commodities flow, the
>resistances they encounter, the ways in which
>they are localized, transformed, and engender
>new cultural practices and have social and
>economic consequence that are completely
>unanticipated by the production centre are issues the conference will address.
>
>
>
>We would like to examine questions related to
>cultural markets and cultural economy. These include but are not limited to:
>
>
>
>a) Cultural impenetrability. Why do certain
>markets, especially Asian markets, prove to be
>impenetrable to commodities produced elsewhere?
>What role does the industrial and business
>context of the host market play in
>determining/limiting the flow of imported cultural commodities?
>
>
>
>b) Localization. The acceptance of cultural
>objects in new markets is a direct consequence
>of localization, or the mediation of the object
>by distribution and exhibition sectors of the
>host country. How are cultural imports localized
>in the contexts examined? Of particular interest
>is the role played by film and television
>industries in localizing imports through
>context-specific publicity campaigns, dubbing, etc.
>
>
>
>c) Creation of new subcultures. What new
>sub-cultures are formed in host countries and
>what is their similarity/difference with their
>counterparts in the production centre? These
>subcultures are at times premised on existing
>cultural stereotypes of the production centre
>and at other times they seriously challenge
>stereotypes (as in the case of Korean drama in
>Japan, which has contributed to the changed perception of Korea in Japan).
>
>
>
>d) Invisible and underground markets and Soft
>Power. The relative lack of control over
>distribution and exhibition and the rampant
>circulation of pirated media content in Asia
>create a situation in which cultural consumption
>is actively facilitated by unauthorized and
>underground markets. Typically, Japanese, Korean
>and Indian cultural commodities arrive in an
>authorized, legal market long after illegal
>channels introduced them there. How do
>entertainment industries grapple with complex
>questions posed by unauthorized circulation of
>their productions? Do current discussions of
>soft power adequately account for the actual
>extent of the circulation and influence of imported forms?
>
>
>
>e) Dispersal across media formats. Although
>dispersal of media content across a range of
>technologies and formats is not confined to
>Asia, we would like to draw attention to the
>ways in which digital technology has mediated
>the circulation of Asian cultural forms. The
>conference would like to examine the new
>opportunities and challenges of post-celluloid
>technologies for entertainment industries of the region.
>
>
>
>Tentatively, the conference will be organized
>around the following broad areas:
>
>
> * Asian Culture Industries: Conceptual and theoretical issues;
> * Celluloid and post-Celluloid media forms in Asia
> * Imported entertainment: Case studies of India, Japan and Korea
> * Export of Culture: focus on comparative
> studies of more than one context of reception.
>
>
>
>Paper abstracts (250 words) should be submitted
>to S.V.Srinivas at
><mailto:(theasianpopular /at/ cscs.res.in)>(cidasia /at/ cscs.res.in).
>Abstracts may be in Word or RTF formats,
>following this order: author(s), affiliation,
>email address, title of abstract, body of
>abstract. Abstracts should be submitted no later
>than 30 August, 2010. If an abstract is accepted
>for the conference, a full draft paper should be
>submitted by November 10, 2010. The maximum
>duration of individual presentations within each
>panel will be 25 minutes. All papers should be
>unpublished because they will be published on
>the conference website and/or in an edited conference volume.
>
>Further announcements about registration,
>funding and venue related details will be made
>available in due course. Please contact S.V.
>Srinivas at
><mailto:(srinivas /at/ cscs.res.in)>(srinivas /at/ cscs.res.in)
> or
><mailto:(theasianpopular /at/ cscs.res.in)>(cidasia /at/ cscs.res.in)
>for additional information.
>
>
>
>Financial and other support:
>
>
> * Complete or partial air travel
> reimbursement will be provided for a limited
> number of participants traveling from within
> Asia. Preference will be given to younger applicants.
> * All participants will be provided basic,
> non-smoking accommodation free of cost for a
> maximum of three nights. Meals will be provided during the conference days.
> * Indian visa costs and taxi fares will not
> be covered by the organizers.
>
>
>
>If you wish to apply for a travel reimbursement,
>indicate in a separate paragraph below your
>abstract the approximate cost of your air ticket
>and the extent of support you require. As of now
>we only have funding to reimburse a limited
>number of fares for participants travelling from
>locations in Asia and affiliated to institutions
>in Asian countries. We are in the process of
>seeking additional funds but at this stage we
>cannot commit ourselves to supporting travel
>costs of participants from non-Asian locations.
>
>
>--
>S.V. Srinivas
>Senior Fellow & Coordinator
>CIDASIA Research Programme
>Centre for the Study of Culture and Society
>No. 827, 29th Main Road
>Poornaprajna HBCS Layout
>Uttarahalli, BANGALORE - 560 061
>
>Phone: 91-80-2642 3266/ 67 /68
>Fax: 91-80-2642 3002
>
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Nico Carpentier (Phd)
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Vrije Universiteit Brussel - Free University of Brussels
Centre for Studies on Media and Culture (CeMeSO)
Pleinlaan 2 - B-1050 Brussels - Belgium
T: ++ 32 (0)2-629.18.56
F: ++ 32 (0)2-629.36.84
Office: 5B.401a
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