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[ecrea] CFP: Picturing the Popular
Wed Oct 31 18:21:44 GMT 2012
Call for Papers
7th Annual Critical Studies Graduate Student Conference
“Picturing the Popular”
University of Southern California
Los Angeles, CA
Saturday, April 13, 2013
Submission Deadline: Monday, January 14, 2013
The graduate students of Critical Studies at the University of Southern
California’s School of Cinematic Arts seek presentations from fellow
graduate students that examine the relationships and tensions between
popular culture and academia.
In engaging with popular objects, scholars, critics, and consumers must
all negotiate the potential discontinuities between popularity and
cultural or artistic merit. “Picturing the Popular” turns critical
inquiry back onto the scholar to explore how our own intellectual and
pedagogical praxes impact, and are impacted by, the study of popular
culture.
This conference poses two sets of questions. One: what does academic
scrutiny and critical inquiry reveal about our criteria for defining and
evaluating popular culture? Does academic attention always recognize
the depth and cultural significance of a work, or is there a risk of
artificially inflating the importance of a work that is otherwise
unremarkable? How does academic thinking define our understandings of
what is popular or unpopular?
Two: How is our very understanding of the popular informed by the
functions of academia? To what extent is academic inquiry determined by
popular trends, accessibility of media objects, accepted wisdoms, and
academia’s own tastes and biases? How does the specialized set of
intellectual parameters employed by academics impact our
professionalization?
We welcome papers, creative projects, and other non-traditional
presentations exploring the roles that popular, mainstream, or hegemonic
media (and their opposites) play in our scholarship and our classrooms.
Presentations may address popular culture in connection to the widest
possible range of social, cultural, political, and economic phenomena.
Possible topics may include, but are not limited to:
• fandom and user-generated media
• star studies
• genre studies
• industry research
• issues of taste, value, quality
• canonicity
• popular or "accepted" histories, identities, political narratives
• populism and social movements
• popularity across national boundaries, issues of translation,
adaptation
• alternatives to mainstream popularity (avant-garde/art cinema,
trash cinema)
• “disreputable” media, such as reality television or pornography
• “aca-blogging” and other forms of popular culture production by
academics
• academic practice, pedagogy, professionalization
Please submit your proposals to Lorien R. Hunter ((lrhunter /at/ usc.edu)) and
Mike Dillon ((dillon /at/ usc.edu)) by Monday, January 14, 2013. Submissions
should include a 250-300 word abstract and a brief bio. Please feel
free to contact us with questions.
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