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[Commlist] CFP: New Reflections on Fashioning Identities: Lifestyle, Emotions and Celebrity Culture
Thu Jan 31 13:22:01 GMT 2019
Call for Papers :New Reflections on Fashioning Identities: Lifestyle,
Emotions and Celebrity Culture 14 June 2019
University of Roehampton - London, UK.
A one-day symposium supported by the Centre for Research in Film and
Audio-Visual Cultures (CRFAC), in association with the Fashion, Costume
and Visual Cultures (FCVC) Network. Organised by Dr T. Thomadaki
Keynote Speakers
Dr Shaun Cole Associate Professor of Fashion at Winchester School of
Art, University of Southampton.
Gok Wan Multi-award-winning UK presenter, fashion expert and on-screen
consultant.
Abstracts of up to 300 words along with a short biography and contact
details, should be submitted to Dr Theodora Thomadaki at
(theodora.thomadaki /at/ roehampton.ac.uk) by February 15th, 2019.
Notifications will be sent out in early March 2019.
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Topics may include, but are not limited to:
Makeover culture and self-improvement
Reality TV and ordinary celebrities
Celebrity, fashion and branding
TV, transformation and lifestyle culture
Fashion, sexuality and gender performativity
Ordinary clothes and fashion objects
Social media, editing and consumption practices
Clothes, skin and emotional expression
[Post]feminism, beauty and the body
Psychoanalysis and popular culture.
Presenters at the symposium will be encouraged to develop their papers
for publication in a number of Intellect journals, including: Film,
Fashion and Consumption, Clothing Cultures, Critical Studies in Men’s
Fashion, and Queer Studies in Media and Popular Culture. A full list of
Intellect journals is available at:
https://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/index/
SUMMARY
Gok Wan’s award winning series How To Look Good Naked (Channel 4,
2006-2010) vividly revolutionised the popular terrains of the makeover
genre. It pushed the cultural boundaries of the traditional makeover
format by facilitating an emotionally rich transformational experience
where female participants reflectively engaged with hidden and often
unexplored aspects of their inner subjective experiences. For Gok Wan,
the way in which ordinary women emotionally perceived their own body
imperfections, as well as how they undervalued their self-worth, is what
the programme considered important and in need of modifying. Thomadaki
(2017) argues that the appearance of the specific format facilitated by
Gok Wan in How To Look Good Naked signals an important shift in the
makeover frame towards a discourse of the therapeutic, chiming with what
has widely been hailed as a particularly ‘therapeutic’ moment in popular
culture (Richards, 2004; Richards and Brown, 2011, 2002; Bainbridge and
Yates, 2012, 2014; Yates, 2013). Gok Wan’s How To Look Good Naked’s use
of fashion/stylistic skills and practices revealed the expert’s capacity
to generate creative opportunities, where aspects of the self can emerge
through the playful engagement with fashion and makeover objects related
to the participant’s inner self-experience. The effectiveness of the How
To Look Good Naked practice launched Gok Wan as a powerful celebrity and
on-screen fashion consultant who has been recognised for his continued
effort in raising emotional awareness for current feminine body related
issues and concerns, as well as for introducing ‘feel good’ practices
that offer opportunities for self-reflection and self-growth. His
empathetic capacity to reflectively engage with his female subjects
revealed an important evolution in the makeover frame, where the
omnipotent figure of the expert as objective judge was culturally undone.
Ten years on, the Gok Wan phenomenon can be seen to have played a key
role in shaping what we understand as ‘therapeutic’ in popular British
lifestyle media and makeover culture. This symposium aims to bring
together established, early career and emerging scholars and
practitioners working in fashion, promotional culture, celebrity studies
and lifestyle media to explore current debates on makeover, fashion and
lifestyle practices that enable us to bridge the outer and inner word as
means of (re)exploring, (re)discovering, and reflecting on the body,
self, sexuality and identity.
Anita Biressi PhD FRSA FHEA
Professor of Media and Society
Chair MeCCSA
Dept. Media, Culture and Language
Southlands College
Room QB 026
University of Roehampton | London | SW15 5SL
(a.biressi /at/ roehampton.ac.uk) <mailto:(a.biressi /at/ roehampton.ac.uk)> |
www.roehampton.ac.uk <http://www.roehampton.ac.uk/>
Tel: +44 (0) 20 8392 3396
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