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[Commlist] CFP: Gender, Genre and the Body in Contemporary North American and European Film
Wed Jul 31 19:40:45 GMT 2019
*CFP*
*
*
***Edited Collection:
**/Gender, Genre and the Body in Contemporary North American and
European Film/
*
Gender and the body are inextricably connected, and it could be argued
that within any given filmic context, they are also closely related to
genre and generic traditions. Moreover, genres often use genders, gender
stereotypes and bodies in diverse and specific ways, and gender and its
relationship to the body performs different functions in the context of
a given genre. In horror, for example, the body is typically tortured,
ruptured and made abject, as evidenced in films such as /Human Centipede
II/ (dir. Tom Six, 2011), /Prevenge/ (dir.Alice Lowe, 2016) and /Raw/
(dir. Julia Ducournau, 2016). In action/adventure, for instance, the
body and the performance of gender is usually spectacular, robust and is
tested to the limit, in films like /The Expendables/ (dir. Sylvester
Stallone, 2010), /White House Down/ (dir. Roland Emmerich, 2013), and
/Atomic Blonde /(dir. David Leitch, 2017).
This collection, then, aims to critically examine and interrogate the
representation of the body and its relationship to/both/ gender and
genre in contemporary North American and European film. For the sake of
clarity, contemporary strictly means post-2010, and the films included
and under discussion should have been produced and circulated in any
North American or European countries. Moreover, we are using the term
‘film’ instead of ‘cinema’, as we will accept chapters that not only
examine and discuss theatrically-released films, but also underground
and avant-garde films, as well as there being a section dedicated to
(hard-core) pornography.
The collection will be structured around popular genres, and these are:
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Horror
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Comedy
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Action/Adventure
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Romance
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Drama/Melodrama
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Science-fiction
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(Hard-core) Pornography
*
Musical
We are aiming to have 3 chapters for each section, with each chapter
being 6,000 words long. In regards to hybrid genres, such as the rom-com
or the ‘thriller’, it will be at the discretion of the editors to decide
where to best place the chapter, and this decision will revolve around
what films are being used as case studies, as well as how the authors
frame their argument. In other words, we do not discourage applications
which are concerned with hybrid films, but we do not have dedicated
sections to hybrid or sub-genres.
Furthermore, chapters may centre on (but are obviously not limited to):
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Masculinity, genre and the body
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Femininity, genre and the body
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Intersections of race, gender and the body
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Intersections of sexuality, gender and the body
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Intersections of class, gender and the body
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Feminist approaches to gender, genre and the body
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Embodiment
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Queer bodies
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Gender, genre and disability
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Gender and/or bodily stereotypes
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Labour, agency and the ‘working body’
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Artificial bodies
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‘Unreal’ and/or spectacular bodies
The editors have been in contact with Edinburgh University Press, for
this to be included in their ‘Gender and the Body in Contemporary
Literature and Culture’ series, to which the series editors are also
keen. Once abstracts have been accepted, a formal proposal will be sent
to EUP in December 2019, with publication hopefully being early-to-mid 2022.
Please send abstracts of 250 – 300 words, with a supporting bio of no
more than 100 words, to (gendergenrebodies /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(gendergenrebodies /at/ gmail.com)>by *_Friday 6^th September 2019_*.
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