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[ecrea] CFP – To each their own pop. Music, cinema and television in Europe in the period of the youth movements (1960-1979)
Thu Jan 25 21:57:34 GMT 2018
_LAST CALL WITH EXTENDED DEADLINE_
CFP – *To each their own pop. Music, cinema and television in Europe in
the period of the youth movements (1960-1979)*
Edited by Alessandro Bratus (Università degli Studi di Pavia), Massimo
Locatelli (Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore), Miguel Mera (City,
University of London)
*Deadline for abstract proposal: February 20, 2018***
**
The scope of this issue is to gather papers related to a decisive period
in the development of audiovisual media in contemporary Europe: *the
60's and 70's* are linked with different patterns of economic growth
and consumption across different countries, but nevertheless related to
the diffusion of television and the new technologies in the record
industry, from both the point of view of production and reproduction.
Such changes determined the emergence of new forms of *expression*,
*media aggregation* and *consumption behaviors *with respect to the past.
On the *artistic front*, the period witnessed the pluralisation of
popular culture as it became increasingly segmented in complex ways
according to factors such as age, genre and social status, a phenomenon
which led to a broadening of the horizons, places and use of cultural
products. This is the period that marked the advent of a particularly
complex relationship between pop, the popular and processes of
generification, a relationship which impacted significantly also on the
overall organisation of the media system as a whole.
In terms of *social aggregation*, the identification of communities,
especially among the young, became based increasingly on participation
in public events (whether political or cultural) which served as
concrete manifestations of the tension towards lifestyles and needs
which moved increasingly away from traditional cultural affiliations
towards a broader, more transnational context. The more overtly
political dimensions of the media output of the period came into play,
with particular emphasis on the modes of popularisation of the
countercultural and avant-garde trends typical of the era, foreshadowing
their entering the cultural mainstream.
On the level of *production and consumption* of media technologies, the
importance of such phenomena became the starting point for media
narratives that found fruition in genres such as the live recording and
the concert film; at the same time, the production of music specifically
designed for other media became an established reality, with the
introduction to the market of specific products dedicated to film music
or with close links to television and radio broadcasts. In this sense
there is a need for a more systematic approach to the historical and
theoretical framework which sets out, in particular, from questions
relating to the sound artefact and its social-technological dimension,
the transformation of the soundscape, the change in the status of
musicians, and media performance.**
*The special issue aims at being particularly open to comparative
contributions*which highlight both the specific characteristics of the
national contexts and the features that we might call the
"mediatisation" of contemporary culture. We wish to draw out and explore
some of the tensions between notions of the underground and mainstream,
and the local, national, and international.
The essays can be focused on four specific points of intersection, with
the aim of responding in full to the four main research objectives of
the issue:
* first and foremost, research into the industrial relationships
between the various different sectors of national and international
media production in those years, through the cataloguing and close
examination of contractual conditions and, more generally, of the
different formats used and of the sales, distribution and marketing
strategies employed. In this area, the role of the song, the disc
and the singers will probably prove pivotal, as the key to the trend
towards the process of convergence on a single, easily recognisable
product to be promoted in parallel in the various distribution
channels of the audiovisual market;
* secondly, there would seem to be a need to reconstruct the
contribution and the professional expertise of the authors and
technicians who worked in the various sectors – directors who were
active in both cinema and television, composers who contributed to
the diversification of the forms, as well as technicians and sound
mixers – so as to shed new light on them and on their activities and
to reconstruct the network of reciprocal relationships between them;
* thirdly, on the basis of the above, it will be possible to renew and
update the study and analysis of the audiovisual production of the
period, reconstructing the intricate network ofgenres and authorial
paths so as to reach an understanding of the configuration of styles
that mark the period concerned. The same logic applies to the
presence of parallel circuits of production, distribution and
reception in the music and audiovisual fields, with phenomena such
as singer-songwriters, groups and mainstream production acting as a
counterpart to the production of songwriters, whether popular or in
different genres;
* lastly, it will be possible to work in the light of the information
that has emerged in the recent inter-disciplinary debate surrounding
the detailed, chronological redefinition of the relationship between
the production chain of the audiovisual media industry and the music
business. The field of music production may be understood as the
first step in the modernisation of the national community, which
finds one of its constitutive features not only in the mediatisation
of cultural products (the possibility to reproduce both texts and
performance) and in the new model of artistic collaboration that
emerged (the group as a collective, creative entity), but also – and
above all – in the new type of audience experience that was made
possible through the development of new environments for sound and,
more generally, for other media.
*Submission details*
Contributors are asked to submit an abstract (300-500 words, 5 keywords,
and 5 bibliographical references) and a short biographical note (150
words) to: (italianway2pop /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(dallagas /at/ unive.it)>AND
(submissions.cinemaetcie /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(submissions.cinemaetcie /at/ gmail.com)>by *February 20, 2018*.
All notifications of acceptance will be sent no later than *March 15,
2018*. After the notice of acceptance, 4,000 words essays will be
required by *June 15, 2018*, then they will be subjected to peer review.
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