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[ecrea] Not Another Teen Film: Historical Essays on American Cinema and Youth
Mon Nov 07 14:03:26 GMT 2011
Call for Chapter:
/Not Another Teen Movie: Historical Essays on American Cinema and Youth/
Solicited is a single chapter of around 6,000 words (plus bibliography)
to complete the line-up of a proposed edited collection of essays
provisionally entitled /Not Another Teen Movie: Historical Essays on
American Cinema and Youth. /A synopsis of the collection is included
below. Currently, the collection boasts fourteen chapters from an
international group of leading scholars in the field. The chapter itself
is needed for a section provisionally entitled “Production Trends”.
The chapter would ideally observe the following guidelines:
1. The chapter is to focus on a youth-oriented and/or youth-centred
production trend or film cycle that in the main unfolded between the
years 1950 and 1967.
2. The development(s) upon which the chapter focuses may either be
principally a product of activity from within the American film industry
or may be mainly or exclusively the product of a non-American industry
or film industries having engaged with some aspect of American youth
film culture, be that output, content, or the American youth as a target
market.
3. The chapter must either bring to light a trend or cycle hitherto
neglected or marginalized in Anglophone film historiography or shed new
light on a previously examined trend or cycle.
4. The chapter is to be the product of film historical approaches and
methods.
5. The chapter will be anchored to sophisticated understandings of the
relationships between industry practice, content and themes, and output.
6. The chapter will not have been published previously.
Abstracts of 200-400 words plus an up-to-date academic bio of 50-100
words are to be submitted as soon as possible in PDF or Word form to
(richard_nowell /at/ hotmail.com) <mailto:(richard_nowell /at/ hotmail.com)>
Yours Sincerely,
Dr. Richard Nowell (editor)
*_ _*
*_Synopsis_*
The relationships between American cinema and youth have been complex,
shaping in diverse ways film production, distribution, exhibition,
reception, and appropriation. Broadly speaking, the American youth
market has long since been recognized as the engine driving the American
movie business, with efforts to appeal to the hearts, minds, and pockets
of young people underwriting the conduct of creative and commercial
personnel operating in Hollywood, across the American independent
sector, and even based overseas (see Doherty; Nowell). It can also be
said that, as highly committed yet supposedly impressionable consumers,
young people – Americans or otherwise – have featured prominently in
public sphere discourse, often as the objects of adult concerns over
their alleged susceptibility to the apparent rabble-rousing, stupefying
or narcotizing effects of consuming too much, or the “wrong kind” of
American cultural product (see Biltereyst). Conversely, American cinema
is understood as a youth-friendly cinema that plays important roles in
the lives of many young people across the globe (see Meers). Such points
notwithstanding, the specific character of these relationships remains
loosely sketched and is currently supported by only a handful of case
studies. This situation has arisen in part because scholarly attention
has tended to be focused towards on-screen images of young Americans and
towards diagnosing certain teenpics, fads, and representational tropes
as symptoms of the broader psychological, social, and political
backdrops against which they took form (see Lewis; Shary). An inevitable
by-product of the longstanding and continued pre-eminence of such
approaches in both scholarly and popular circles (see Bernstein) has
been the erection of canons of touchstone films and trends as well as
the dissemination of reductive notions of youths as malleable consumers,
which, as a whole, have served to erase many of the nuances
characterizing this rich and multifaceted aspect of cinema history.
Developing new lines of enquiry into the intersections of youth and
American cinema is therefore both salient and timely; Not Another Teen
Movie aims to do so through a series of case studies, characterized by
the application of the diverse theoretically-underpinned, empirically
researched approaches known collectively as the New Film History (see
Chapman, Glancy, and Harper), that is intended to broaden understandings
of, shed new light on, and make substantial revisions to, this key area
of cinema studies.
Accordingly, Not Another Teen Movie brings together essays written by
scholars from around the globe, all exploring the historical dimensions
of American cinema and youth across the twentieth century and into the
new millennium, both in American film culture as well as in other
national contexts.
Richard Nowell teaches American Cinema at Charles University in Prague.
He is the author of /Blood Money a History of the First Teen Slasher
Film /Cycle, has served as a guest editor of /Iluminace: The Journal of
Film Theory, History, and Aesthetics/, and his articles have been
published or are forthcoming in, among others, /Cinema Journal/,
/Journal of Film and Video/, /Post Script/, and /The New Review of Film
and Television Studies./
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