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[ecrea] CFP: “I’ll See You Again in 25 Years”: The Return of Twin Peaks and Generations of Cult TV conference
Tue Jan 27 18:51:24 GMT 2015
Final Call for Papers
Deadline extension: Friday 13 February 2014
“I’ll See You Again in 25 Years”: The Return of Twin Peaks and
Generations of Cult TV
A two-day international conference.
School of Arts and Media, University of Salford, UK
21st- - 22nd May 2015
Confirmed keynote speakers:
· Professor David Lavery (Middle Tennessee State
University, USA)
· Cristina Alvarez (Barcelona based independent
video artist)
· Dr Adrian Martin (Monash University, Australia)
Proposals are invited for a two-day international conference on the
return of the popular cult television series Twin Peaks. The conference
presents a timely reconsideration of the critically acclaimed programme
with the announcement of its return to television after a twenty five
year hiatus. In the meantime, cultures of television production,
circulation and viewer practices have changed dramatically; the US cable
sector in this period becoming the primary site for a model of
auteur-driven, big-budget offbeat serial drama that Twin Peaks served as
prototype for, with this trend underpinning Showtime’s recommissioning
of this series of broadcast network origin. But alongside such
transformation, the cultural prominence of this landmark programme has
endured, as the considerable enthusiasm among critics and fans for the
series’ return demonstrates.
This conference seeks to address the issue of Twin Peaks’ significant
influence and lasting appeal from a number of multi-disciplinary
perspectives. We welcome proposals from scholars in the fields of
cultural studies, television studies, film studies, visual arts, popular
music studies, sound studies performance studies, digital and social
media and related disciplines.
Proposals are invited on (but not limited to) the following topics:
Twin Peaks and fandom
Twin Peaks and generations of cult television
Music and sound design in Twin Peaks
Set design and visual style
The use and subversion of the crime and melodrama genres
Feminism and gender relations
Seriality in Twin Peaks and contemporary television
Camp performance styles in Twin Peaks
David Lynch and televisual auteurism
Twin Peaks and social media
Generations of quality television
Intertextuality between television, film and literature
Comic and melodramatic performance styles
Film and television convergence
Twin Peaks and the contemporary television industry
Deadline for abstracts: 13 February 2015
300 word abstracts plus a 100 word biography should be sent to the
conference organisers:
Kirsty Fairclough (K.Fairclough /at/ salford.ac.uk)
Michael Goddard (M.N.Goddard /at/ salford.ac.uk)
Anthony Smith (A.N.Smith /at/ salford.ac.uk)
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