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[ecrea] cfp - The 11th International Conference and Festival on Global Cult Film Traditions
Fri Jul 21 17:51:55 GMT 2017
Call for Papers
The 11th International Conference and Festival on Global Cult Film
Traditions
Birmingham City University Presents:
Cine Excess XI
Fear and the Unfamiliar: Wrong Time, Wrong Place, Wrong Crowd Birmingham
City University (and related screening venues)
9th-11th November 2017
www.cine-excess.co.uk
Over the last 11 years, the Cine-Excess International Film Conference
and Festival has brought together leading scholars and critics with
global cult filmmakers for an event comprising a themed academic
conference with plenary talks, filmmaker interviews and UK theatrical
premieres of up and coming film releases.
Previous guests of honour attending Cine-Excess have included Catherine
Breillat (Romance, Sex is Comedy), John Landis (An American Werewolf in
London, The Blues Brothers), Roger Corman (The Masque of the Red Death,
The Wild Angels), Stuart Gordon (Re-Animator, King of the Ants), Brian
Yuzna (Society, The Dentist), Dario Argento (Deep Red, Suspiria), Joe
Dante (The Howling, Gremlins), Franco Nero (Django, Keoma, Die Hard II),
Vanessa Redgrave (Blow Up, The Devils), Ruggero Deodato (Cannibal
Holocaust, House on the Edge of the Park), Enzo G. Castellari (Keoma,
The Inglorious Bast***s), Sergio Martino (Torso, All the Colours of the
Dark), Jeff Lieberman (Squirm, Blue Sunshine), Pat Mills (Action
Magazine, 2000 AD) and Jake West (Evil Aliens, Dog House).
Cine-Excess XI is hosted by the Birmingham School of Media at Birmingham
City University, and will feature a three day academic conference
alongside filmmaking guests, industry panels and a season of related UK
premieres and retrospectives taking place at screening venues across the
region.
For its 11th annual addition, the conference Fear and the Unfamiliar:
Wrong Time, Wrong Place, Wrong Crowd considers the ways in which cult
media exploits the boundaries of self and other in order to address
horror and unease across a range of key genres. Specifically, it
revisits and reconsiders Robin Wood’s (1986) taxonomy of otherness,
which positioned categories such as women, the working class, ethnicity,
alternative ideologies, and deviations from the ideological sexual norm
as triggers for the evolution of the horror film and related
transgressive genres.
Although Wood’s original return of the repressed hypothesis generated a
range of critical readings around disreputable film genres, the
parameters of his analysis have become invested with new and politicised
resonances in recent years. Here, acts of extremism, and the making
strange of the familiar in the contemporary milieu of Trump’s travel
ban, a proposed wall to separate Mexico from the US, and generalised
calls for greater immigration control all serve to resituate ‘other
people’, ‘other cultures’ and ‘other places’ as sources of fear and
revulsion. In short, awareness of individual, national and international
difference has once more become culturally and politically foregrounded
as threatening, thereby situating the other as being at the axes of
Wrong Time, Wrong Place, Wrong Crowd.
Cine-Excess XI invites papers that either look back to Wood’s original
premise, or assess more contemporaneous works/influences to consider
such boundary awareness through the articulation of the other in cult
media, film and television. This might involve the making strange of the
familiar person/self, either in appearance or behaviour, perhaps through
the mirror image or the doppelganger, or the rendering of places and
spaces as uncanny, different or ideologically/physically remote, such as
in the Gothic ruin, the rural backwater, or the isolated cabin in the
woods. Proposals might also examine how shifts in time likewise cause
ordinary contemporary on-screen places to become peculiar, excessive and
cult.
Proposals are now invited for papers on a wide range of cult media
case-studies, including film, television, literature, comics and digital
media. However, we would particularly welcome contributions focusing on:
• Legacy of the living dead – Social realism and apocalyptic satire in
the cinema of George A. Romero
• Cabins, cannibals and chainsaws – The transgressive other of US cult
cinema
• Migrant trauma – Fears of the immigrant in classical and contemporary
media • Bloody kids – Infants and infantile fears in cult media
traditions • The return of the repressed redux – New readings of the
concept of the other
• The savage lens – Colonial visions of the unfamiliar • The gothic
other – Terrors old and new • Wicker men and stone children – British
tradition, folklore and cross-generational conflicts in UK cult film
cultures
• “Colonised by bourgeois ideology” – Robin Wood and the fear of the
working class • Picket fences and domestic perversions – Unwholesome
portrayals of the nuclear family in cult film and television
• Invasion USA – Alternative ideologies and fears of national infiltration
• Deadlier than the male – Case-studies of the transgressive female on
screen • Film and the unfamiliar – Global visions, transnational
variants and genres out of place • Don’t go into the woods tonight –
Urban fears in cinema’s forgotten rural spaces • Lost boys and girls –
Gang culture tropes across cult film and TV • Cult on cults –
Representations of religious and political extremists • Sexuality and
the unfamiliar – Queer bodies and threats to heteronormativity • The
other within – Outcasts , radicals and vengeful veterans
• Fear of the once familiar – Mainstream icons reborn as cult performers
• The Cultification of the Uncanny – Theoretical perspectives on the
concept of the unfamiliar
• Fear of the all too familiar – Doubles and doppelgangers in cult
film and TV
Please send a 300-word abstract and a short (one page) C.V. by
Friday 8th September 2017 to:
Xavier Mendik Fran Pheasant-Kelly
Birmingham City University University of Wolverhampton
(xavier.mendik /at/ bcu.ac.uk) (F.E.Pheasant-kelly /at/ wlv.ac.uk)
A final listing of accepted presentations will be released on Friday
15th September 2017.
Delegate fees for Cine-Excess XI are £130 (standard) /£60 (concessions)
for the three days, or £50 (standard) and £25 (concessions) per day.
This fee includes entrance to the conference and related Cine-Excess
screenings and industry panels. For further information and regular
updates on the event (including information on guests, keynotes and
screenings) please visit www.cine-excess.co.uk
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