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[ecrea] CFP - Sites of Popular Music Heritage
Wed May 18 14:32:17 GMT 2011
*SITES OF POPULAR MUSIC HERITAGE -- SYMPOSIUM*
Institute of Popular Music, University of Liverpool
8--9 September 2011
*_EXTENDED CALL FOR PAPERS_*
We invite proposals from a broad range of academic disciplines for a 2
day symposium examining sites of popular music heritage: from
institutions such as museums, to geographic locations, websites and
online archives. Papers are welcomed that explore popular music within
narratives of heritage and identity, real and imagined geographies,
cultural memory and contested histories. The event will focus on three
thematic areas: *
*
*Popular Music Heritage in the Museum*
In recent years museums have increasingly engaged with popular music
heritage, as evidenced in a proliferation of exhibitions including those
in the UK such as Kylie: The Exhibition at the V&A and the British Music
Experience at the O2. Museum interaction with popular music heritage
enables methods of narration beyond traditional written histories,
engaging visitors with objects, sounds and images. The place of popular
music in the museum raises issues of how music is both represented and
used to represent and explore social histories, personal and collective
identities, memories, and geographies. Possible themes for papers include:
- Popular music and locality in the museum
- Disseminating popular music heritage in museums beyond text
- History and memory in popular music exhibitions and collections ***
Heritage, Place and Local Identity*
While ideas of heritage and cultural memory play an increasingly
important role in popular music historiography, the spatial and
geographic frameworks underpinning the production of popular music
histories remain comparatively under-examined in studies to date. The
spatial embedding of popular music heritage raises questions as to the
ways in which ideas of local, regional and national identity are shaped
by geographies of music and place; the role of mobility practices in the
production of local music histories; and the capacity for popular music
memoryscapes to stimulate (and sustain) embodied and emotional
attachments to places and localities. Possible themes for papers include:
- Contested geographies of popular music heritage
- Routes of popular music heritage: mobility, migration, wayfinding
- Cartographies of popular music history * *
*
Digital Archives and Online Practice*
Heritage practices have proliferated in the digital age and a large part
of related activity online is devoted to popular music. 'Authorised' or
otherwise, social media groups, blogs and web pages are organised and
defined by, amongst other things, genre, artist, period and geography.
Sites dedicated to the popular music of Birmingham, Manchester,
Sheffield, Coventry, Bristol, Woolongong, Brisbane or Detroit speak
simultaneously to the hyper-local and global quality of popular music
culture. The nature of such online practices raise questions about the
ontology of the archive, the digital 'artefact' and collective memory.
In light of the challenges presented to the music industries by
digitisation, key questions concern the role of music and related
intellectual property in online 'folk' histories. Possible themes for
papers include:
- Authorising popular music heritage and archiving practice online
- Building music cultures and communities of memory online
- Online music heritage, music industries and ownership
*Confirmed Keynote Speakers:*
Andy Bennett, Professor in Cultural Sociology, Griffith University,
Australia
Philippe Le Guern, Professor of Sociology of Culture, University of
Avignon, France.
Please submit proposals for papers (300 words max) to Dr Rob Knifton
((robert.knifton /at/ liverpool.ac.uk) <mailto:(robert.knifton /at/ liverpool.ac.uk)>
) and Dr Les Roberts ((les.roberts /at/ liverpool.ac.uk)
<mailto:(les.roberts /at/ liverpool.ac.uk)>).
Extended deadline for abstracts: *31 May 2011*
Date for registration: *30 June 2011*
Deadline for submission of draft papers: *01 Aug 2011*
· Further information and registration details will be posted shortly at
www.liv.ac.uk/music/ <http://www.liv.ac.uk/music/>
· Papers presented at the symposium will be considered for publication.
/This event is co-organized with the Centre for Media and Cultural
Research at Birmingham City University./
--
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