Archive for January 2015

[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]

[ecrea] CFP deadline extended: Figures of Transgression in War Representation

Sun Jan 18 10:51:13 GMT 2015




Due to a number of requests we are pleased to say that the deadline for abstracts for the following event has been extended to 1st February 2015.

Please circulate widely to interested colleagues, with apologies for cross posting.

Interdisciplinary Research Workshop, 11 May 2015, University of Reading

Figures of Transgression in War Representation


In periods of crisis, when national or cultural identity is unstable, contested, or openly destabilized; when binary oppositions between self and other, ‘us’ and ‘them’, can become both intensified and increasingly strained; and when the experience or memory of conflict ‘on the ground’ threatens to unsettle normative national or cultural narratives of legitimation, popular culture and particularly cinema provide topoi for the working through of anxieties.


War films above all seem to offer effective structures and motifs for a broad engagement with fears and uncertainties as the recent resurgence of World War II films in American and European Cinema indicates. A crucial presence in filmic representations of war are figures of transgression, that is, those figures that trouble normative boundaries, such as traitors, deserters, exiled persons, translators and negotiators. They are a key component – frequently occupying a marginal yet morally or emotionally pivotal narrative position – that permits the rehearsing, exploring, and transforming of those conflicting positions that are or become apparent in clashes between nations, cultures, and religions.


This workshop seeks to bring together scholars in a range of disciplines to better understand how conflict, change and cultural representation are related. With a focus on films covering conflicts from World War I to the ‘war on terror’, we will look at the functions of figures of transgression within war cinema as part of a wider cultural preoccupation with figures and connotations and consequences of transgression. We argue that these figures operate as a crucial site for culturally necessary processes of ‘thinking through,’ their liminal status permitting opportunity for visualizing and repositioning the enemy, the exploration of questions of legitimation and culpability, and the testing of moral and ethical grounds for future national and transnational or inter-cultural identity formation.



While existing scholarship has debated the political, structural and sociological concept of treason (Akerström 1991, Ben-Yehuda 2001, Parikh 2009), very little work has been carried out on figures of transgression. Using an interdisciplinary lens that accommodates both analysis of the narrative and audio-visual depiction of these figures, and analysis of the socio-cultural, political, and historical contexts in which they emerge, the workshop sets out to understand the complex function of transgressors in representations of war and seeks to map a history of identity negotiation that can help us to comprehend better how conflict and cultural change intersect.


We seek 20-minute papers relating to films or other visual representations of a range of wars and violent conflicts, from WWI to the present day, responding to the following questions:

· - How are figures of transgression situated within Western culture, particularly film narratives, and to what ends?

· - How are figures of transgression codified by the various national institutions particularly cinema but also law, politics, history, the army and to what ends?

· - How might figures of transgression function in relation to cultural debates about conflict and identity?

· - Do they function to legitimate or problematize normative perspectives on other and self?

· - What are the connections and disparities between figures of transgression across different historical moments of crisis and reflection?

· - What is the function of the figure of transgression in films that represent popular returns to past periods of war and conflict?


Please send your 400-word proposal and a short biographical note to (u.wolfel /at/ reading.ac.uk) and (l.v.purse /at/ reading.ac.uk) by 16 January 2015.

Best wishes,


Lisa

Dr Lisa Purse

Associate Professor in Film | Department Director of Teaching and Learning | Theme Leader, Rights and Representation Faculty Research Theme, FAHSS

Department of Film, Theatre & Television, Room 202, Minghella Building, Whiteknights, Reading, RG6 6BT, UK
Email (l.v.purse /at/ reading.ac.uk)

Web www.reading.ac.uk/ftt


---------------
ECREA-Mailing list
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier and ECREA.
--
To subscribe, post or unsubscribe, please visit
http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
URL: http://homepages.vub.ac.be/~ncarpent/
--
ECREA - European Communication Research and Education Association
Chauss�de Waterloo 1151, 1180 Uccle, Belgium
Email: (info /at/ ecrea.eu)
URL: http://www.ecrea.eu
---------------


[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]