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[ecrea] cfp: Remapping European Media Cultures during the Cold War: Networks, Encounters, Exchanges
Wed Sep 28 01:30:33 GMT 2016
Remapping European Media Cultures during the Cold War: Networks,
Encounters, Exchanges
A symposium at the University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, March 30 -
April 1, 2017
Keynote speakers:
Anikó Imre (University of Southern California)
Katie Trumpener (Yale University)
Recent research on Cold War Europe has sketched the image of a deeply
interconnected continent, with cultural exchanges, travel and tourism,
scientific collaborations and the like creating dense networks between
countries on both sides of the “Iron Curtain,” and beyond. Media
scholars, similarly, have begun to trace the active collaborations
between Eastern and Western European broadcasting institutions; the
networks formed by artists and technicians at and through film
festivals; the movement of samizdat and tamizdat texts; and the
relationships between professionals in specialized fields such as
children’s entertainment, television, and industrial film.
This symposium aims to systematically examine European media during the
Cold War in terms of such /histoires croisées/, tracing the
transnational encounters between Eastern and Western European media
industries and cultures between 1945 and 1990. The symposium will engage
with a wide range of media forms and practices, from the moving image to
sound to print, in order to ask the following questions:
* How did media technologies, content, and forms travel during the
Cold War, and what logics, institutions, and actors structured and
governed these flows and interactions?
* How can the study of such transnational encounters help us challenge
established ideas and conceptualizations in Cold War history (among
them, the monolithic image of the socialist state, and binary
frameworks)?
* What was the relevance of the geopolitical “in-between” (e.g.,
countries such as Finland, Sweden, Austria, and Yugoslavia, and
spaces such as film festivals) for media cultures during the Cold War?
* If Eastern Europe is commonly considered to be peripheral to the
field of media studies, what are the methodological ramifications of
placing this “periphery” at the center of an examination of European
media cultures during the Cold War? Similarly, what is revealed both
by a comparative examination of media forms, and by a focus on
practices typically considered “marginal” (e.g., sponsored media)?
We invite submissions from scholars across the humanities and
interpretive social sciences pertaining, but not limited, to:
connections, cooperations, and encounters on an institutional and
individual level; coproductions between media institutions in socialist
and non-socialist countries; study and other official visits to and from
socialist media institutions; media spectatorship and reception;
transnational exchange in media educational institutions; the
circulation of socialist media productions outside the Eastern Bloc; and
aesthetic and thematic connections between media in socialist and
non-socialist countries. Submissions examining non-canonical, official,
and “forgotten” media and texts are particularly welcome.
Submissions—including a 300-word abstract and short contributor
bio—should be sent by November 15 to (rems /at/ umn.edu) <mailto:(rems /at/ umn.edu)>;
queries may also be sent to this address. Notification of acceptance
will be made before December 5. Limited contributions toward travel may
be available.
Organized by Mari Pajala (Communication Studies, University of
Minnesota/Media Studies, University of Turku), Alice Lovejoy (Cultural
Studies and Comparative Literature/Moving Image Studies, University of
Minnesota), and Tom Wolfe (History/Institute for Global Studies,
University of Minnesota), and hosted by the Institute for Global Studies
and Center for Austrian Studies at the University of Minnesota, with
support from the Government of Finland/David and Nancy Speer Visiting
Professorship in Finnish Studies, the Center for German and European
Studies, the departments of Communication Studies and Cultural Studies
and Comparative Literature, and the Moving Image Studies Program.
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