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[ecrea] CFP Musicals at the Margins
Fri Jul 07 17:37:16 GMT 2017
/MUSICALS AT THE MARGINS/
CALL FOR CHAPTER PROPOSALS
While the musical for much of its existence has had a relatively
‘strong’ generic identity, the genre’s central semantic element, the
musical number, is also widespread in films not understood to be
musicals. Generic transformations since the late 1970s, as well as
technological, cultural, and industrial change, have produced greater
instability in our collective understanding of what a musical is. Recent
research has focused on the song in film (e.g. Dyer 2011; Spring 2013)
or on musical moments (Conrich and Tincknell 2006), while recent
scholarship on both the musical and on music and film in the context of
the musical has begun to look beyond both the usual canonical texts and
the genre’s usual identification with studio-era Hollywood (e.g. Kessler
2010; Creekmur and Mokdad 2012; Garcia 2014). Yet a narrowly-defined
canon still dominates discussions of the musical as a genre and remains
the basis of its most influential theorisations.
This collection of essays will focus on the genre’s unstable edges and
the margins and boundaries of the musical as a genre, seeking to
contribute to genre studies by investigating one particular case of the
instability of a film genre and how genre can be contested at the levels
of industry, text, and/or reception. Why are particular films
marginalised in scholarship and public discourse? What is lost through a
strong emphasis on the canon? And how do films that challenge
established theorisations of the musical become confined to the
boundaries of the genre?
We invite proposals for chapters approaching this topic from a range of
angles, historical periods, and (inter)national contexts. We are
interested in considering why certain films have been marginalised
despite their evident commonalities with the genre’s canon, as well as
what is at stake for films questioning, bending, or playing with the
musical genre.
Possible topics may include, but are not limited to:
* Boundary cases in various national cinemas, historical eras,
industrial contexts
* Films whose generic status have shifted over time
* The core and the periphery of the musical
* Musicals marginalised in scholarship
* Sub-genres and cycles at the margins
* Stars within these texts
* Authors of boundary cases (directors, screenwriters, producers,
music publishers, etc.)
* How gender, sexuality, race, ethnicity impacts on the generic status
of these films
* The body and the edges of the musical
* Promotion, publicity, and reception of films at the margins
* Specific film studios or production companies
* Analysis of cultural factors that impact on these marginal cases
* Musicals in media beyond film (television, web series, etc.)
* Animated films as musical
* Music films (jazz films, rock films, hip hop films, etc.)
Submission Guidelines:
Please submit your abstracts of no more than 500 words and a brief
100-word bio via email to both editors by Monday 17^th July 2017. We
have already had a positive initial response to this project from a
highly respected academic publisher.We anticipate that finished essays
will be approximately 6000 words in length, including footnotes.
Acceptance of proposals will be sent by email by the end of August 2017.
Please email your abstract and bio to both editors:
Dr Martha Shearer at (marthashearer /at/ gmail.com)
Dr Julie Lobalzo Wright at (j.wright.4 /at/ warwick.ac.uk)
Please feel free to contact us with any queries.
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