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[Commlist] CFP: Audience Lost: Minority Women and Spectatorship
Wed May 15 16:07:21 GMT 2019
*AUDIENCE LOST: MINORITY WOMEN AND SPECTATORSHIP*
22-23 November 2019, Ghent, Belgium
*Keynote speakers: *
Prof. Judith Thissen (Utrecht University)
Prof. Allyson Nadia Field (University of Chicago)
In 2002, Annette Kuhn reflected, in /Dreaming of Fred and Ginger: Cinema
and Cultural Memory/, that in regards to 1930s British cinemagoers, “we
hardly know these people at all” (2002, 3); Jackie Stacey (1994, 49)
focusing on British female movie fans of the 1940s and 1950s, made a
similar observation in 1994, when she noted that “there is a history of
female cinematic spectatorship which has yet to be written.” In their
respective works, both scholars used sources such as magazines,
questionnaires and interviews to begin to write exactly that history.
This conference wishes to build upon this observation that “we hardly
know these people at all” by expanding its meaning in terms of the
people involved, both in terms of time and in terms of demographics. We
therefore invite papers focusing on marginalised female audiences in the
broadest sense, and interpret this in two distinct ways. Firstly, we
seek to hear from scholars focusing on rediscovering or uncovering
particular audiences, marginalised vis-à-vis the texts they consumed
through racial, ethnic or religious identity, through geographic or
linguistic distance, through sexual orientation or gender identity,
through disability status, through social class, etc. This includes a
demographic analysis of such audiences, an examination of their specific
and varied fan practices and attitudes, the intersectional identities of
certain audience members, etc.
It also includes, however, broader contemplations on the very notion of
the “marginalised” audience.
Firstly: if we are indeed all, as Henry Forman wrote in 1933,
“movie-made”, what, then, does it mean to be “made” by movies or media
texts specifically aimed at demographic groups with a privilege
inaccessible to many other audience members? Secondly, we are keen to
acknowledge and discuss the methodological challenges involved in
studying such audiences, and the ways in which difficulties in terms of
scholarly research may essentially serve to marginalise the group in
question further. Thirdly, we wish to invite auto-ethnographic
reflections from scholars working on such research topics, while also
members of one or more marginalised groups themselves.
While the organisers’ own research is rooted within a film-historical
context, and indeed we are very interested in hearing from those engaged
in rediscovering lost historical audiences, we also invite submissions
from those working on contemporary LGBTQ+, disabled, or
racial/ethnic/religious minority women spectators. We particularly hope
to reach out to scholars working within the multidisciplinary field of
fan studies, where much fascinating work has been done, in recent years,
on examining the practices of such audiences, as well as their
relationship to traditional conceptions of fandom (such scholars include
Kristen J. Warner, Rukmini Pande, Julie Levin Russo, Eve Ng, and
others). While film and television history and fan studies have largely
operated in distinct and separate spheres from one another, we believe
the disciplines can come together in fruitful and methodologically
interesting ways in order to allow us a more complete picture of these
often invisible fans.
Potential topics can include, but are not limited to:
• Historical perspectives on cinemagoing in ethnic communities
• Immigrant spectatorship
• The consumption of Hollywood movies by minority women
• LGBTQ+ fandoms
• Methodologies to access historically lost audiences
• Film archives and the marginalised audience
• Black women as movie fans
• Disability and spectatorship
• Studies of film reception amongst specific religious groups
• Women-only film screenings and film clubs
• Characteristics of marginalised spectatorship
• The methodological challenges in examining female audiences
• Theorising lesbian spectatorship
• Working class women and the movies
• Women and film criticism
• Gender and race-specific viewing pleasures
• National minorities and cinema culture
• Girlhood and fandom
• Geographically specific viewing practices
We invite abstracts of no more than 300 words for 20-minute papers, as
well as panel proposals for pre-constituted panels (consisting of three
papers). Conference attendance will be free of charge.
Send your proposal and a short bio to Lies Lanckman and Agata Frymus at
womenspectatorship.conf@gmail by 30 June 2019. The conference website
can be found at https://audiencelost.wordpress.com/.
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