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[ecrea] CFP Life through the Lens: The British Biopic in Focus
Fri Feb 07 04:45:23 GMT 2014
Life through the Lens: The British Biopic in Focus
31st May 2014 at Watershed, Bristol
Keynote speaker: Belén Vidal, King’s College London
Symposium fee: £20 salaried; £10 student/unsalaried (includes tea/coffee)
Deadline for proposals: Friday 7th March 2014
Organised by the UWE Film and Television Studies Research Group
The Execution of Mary Stuart (1895) tells us that the desire to
represent historical lives has been present since the inception of
cinema, while the continued commercial and critical success of biopics,
from The Private Life of Henry VIII (1933) to The King’s Speech (2010),
indicates that the genre has long been important to the British film
industry. The funding for ‘British’ biopics such as 12 Years a Slave
(2013, UK/US) andMandela: Long Walk to Freedom (2013, UK/South Africa)
exemplifies the globalisation of an industry and problematises the
conflation of production context, subject matter and claims to national
specificity. The Iron Lady (2011) and Diana (2013) provide contemporary
examples of the biopic’s sometimes contentious place in the shaping of
history and the development of discourses around public figures. The
diversity of the genre is illustrated through the different forms and
approaches the biopic has taken: historical epics and intimate character
studies, larger-budgeted productions and experimental works. However,
while biopics made in Britain and about British subjects continue to
proliferate, scholarly work in this area is limited.
This symposium therefore seeks to place the British biopic under the
spotlight and to consider appropriate paradigms which reflect the
specificities of British production. It welcomes new angles on canonical
texts and introductions to films that are less familiar. The symposium
will highlight the genre’s sustained and continuing influence on British
filmmaking, and its commercial and critical success - both domestically
and internationally.
Topics may include, but are not restricted to:
- Biopics and stardom, significant actors and the intersection of star
personae and casting.
- Industry-focused papers focusing on the specificities of production,
promotion, distribution and exhibition. Specific producers/directors of
biopics.
- Genre based papers examining cycles, conventions, themes and subject
matter. Papers could address different approaches to subjects
(celebratory, reverential, critical and interrogative).
- The biopic’s ties to documentary, truth claims, techniques and styles.
- Lesser known and marginalised texts.
- The colonial, gendered, racial and ageing discourse that circulate
within the genre.
- The notion of ‘prestige’ in relation to production, casting and awards.
- Genre and technology – the connection between text and contemporary
cinematic technologies.
- Issues regarding adaption, and the intersection between written and
visual media.
Please submit a 250-word abstract for a twenty-minute paper to
(Matthew5.Robinson /at/ live.uwe.ac.uk) by Friday 7th March.
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