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[ecrea] CfP Pinter on Film, Television and Radio
Mon Feb 19 20:32:54 GMT 2018
*The deadline for submissions for the Pinter on Film, Television and
Radio conference has been extended by two weeks to _2 March 2018_.
*
*
Pinter on Film, Television and Radio*
A two-day international conference at the University of Reading and the
British Library, 19-20 September 2018
*Call for papers*
Harold Pinter (1930-2008) was an actor, director and writer whose output
over five decades spanned theatre, film, television, radio, poetry,
prose and politics. His writing for radio and television pushed
aesthetic boundaries and his films contributed to the landscape and
practices of post-war British cinema, while his stage plays have been
part of the canon of world theatre since the 1960s. His work has enjoyed
a place in the public imagination from the early 1960s, due to the
combined impact of the successful stage plays The Caretaker and The
Homecoming, augmented by the popular appeal of radio plays and
television dramas such as The Lover, The Collection and A Night Out and
by the esteem and box-office success of early screenplays such as The
Servant and The Pumpkin Eater.
Pinter’s work on film, television and radio has received less
concentrated attention than his theatre work, which has been widely
discussed, debated and celebrated internationally. The ‘Pinter on Film,
Television and Radio’ conference—the second of three to be held by the
AHRC-funded ‘Harold Pinter: Histories and Legacies’ research
project—therefore invites established scholars and early career
researchers from a range of academic disciplines, together with
practitioners and archivists, to come together to explore all aspects of
Pinter’s works for, and on, film, television and radio. At least one
edited collection or journal special issue will be published from the
papers of this two-day conference.
*Possible topics*
The two central questions pursued by the research project concern the
aesthetics that have been connected with Pinter’s work and the impact
that his work has had on the broader palette of British performance
histories since the 1950s. With regard to this conference’s focus on
film, television and radio, possible topics relating to this wider remit
may include (but are not limited to):
• _Production_ – Pinter’s understanding, as both writer and performer,
of aesthetic choices in production such as the spatial possibilities of
studio and location
• _Collaborative practice_ – Pinter’s work with, for example, particular
directors or producers, and the significance of his networks in
different media contexts
• _Intermediality_ – his development of dramatic narratives across
media, and transfers of dramatic conventions from one medium to another
• _Adaptation_ – the processes involved in realising work through the
performance aesthetics and signifying systems of different media, such
as Pinter's screenplays adapted from novels
• _Theatricality_ – the interconnections between Pinter’s work on film,
television, and radio, on the one hand, and theatre on the other
• _British film cultures_ – Pinter’s role in the changing forms of
British national cinema and its international position
• _Screenwriting_ – Pinter’s engagement with the specific forms and
conventions of writing for the visual media
• _Acting and performance_ – particular performance techniques used by
actors of Pinter drama, and what the recording and mediation of
performances on screen and on radio may tell us
• _Audiences_ – audience engagement and response to Pinter’s work across
different media
• _Gender_ – Pinter’s film, TV and radio in relation to social
constructions of gender
• _Politics_ – how radio and television amplified Pinter’s contribution
to political discourse via his plays and other writings
• _Archives_ – the preservation, archiving and accessibility of Pinter’s
work in media forms; the value of paper archives for historiography of
Pinter’s work (e.g. BL’s Harold Pinter Archive; BBC Written Archives Centre)
• _Audio_ – audio traces such as Pinter’s appearances in oral histories
held by the BL’s Theatre Archive Project, and the BL’s audio record of
Pinter’s theatre plays
*Deadline for abstracts*
Please send abstracts of no more than 200 words and a brief biography by
midnight on Friday _16 February 2018_ to the three conference organisers
Professor Jonathan Bignell, Dr Billy Smart and Dr Amanda Wrigley via
(w.r.smart /at/ reading.ac.uk) <mailto:(w.r.smart /at/ reading.ac.uk)>.
Papers must be delivered in a maximum of 20 minutes including any
extracts or illustrative material. Proposals for three-speaker panels
are also welcome: please collate the information above into one document
and outline briefly the rationale of the panel.
*Venues: University of Reading and the British Library*
This two-day conference will take place on two sites: day one in
Reading, ‘Pinter on Screen’, will focus primarily on Pinter on film and
television, and will be held in Minghella Studios, University of Reading
on Wednesday 19 September 2018; the second day, ‘Pinter on Air’, will
focus primarily on Pinter on radio and in audio archives, and will be
held in the British Library in London on Thursday 20 September 2018. Day
two will also be open to the public and it will showcase the Library’s
prolific audio and manuscript holdings on Pinter as part of the BL’s
Cultural Events programme. The two days will be separately bookable.
Given the intermedial nature of Pinter’s work, however, we anticipate a
great amount of correspondence between the topics and discussions of
both days, and we are keen for academic participants to join for the
whole conference if possible. Accommodation will be offered on the
University of Reading’s Whiteknights campus, the location of the
conference venue on day one. Delegates will travel to the British
Library for day two independently by public transport.
*Context*
This conference is part of series of academic and public events
organised by the inter-institutional research project ‘Harold Pinter:
Histories and Legacies’, a collaboration between the universities of
Birmingham, Leeds and Reading. The project is funded by the Arts and
Humanities Research Council and runs from 2017 to 2019. The project will
host three conferences: the inaugural conference, ‘Staging Pinter:
Networks, Collaborators, Legacies’ will take place at the University of
Birmingham in April 2018: for further information see
https://pinterlegacies.com/events/birmingham-conference-staging-pinter
<https://pinterlegacies.com/events/birmingham-conference-staging-pinter>.
The ‘Pinter on Film, Television and Radio’ conference at the University
of Reading and the British Library, September 2018, is the second event;
and the third conference will be held at the University of Leeds in 2019
to mark the conclusion of the project.
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