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[Commlist] CFP: Bodies, Noise and Power in Industrial Music
Sun Nov 10 10:57:21 GMT 2019
Bodies, Noise and Power in Industrial Music
Edited by Elizabeth Potter and Jason Whittaker
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*
_Collected edition: deadline for proposals, 28 February, 2020_
Following its appearance as part of the post punk scene in the late
1990s, industrial music was very much concerned with emerging critical
engagement with configurations of the body, whether through such forms
as applications of different technologies, electronic body music (EBM),
fashion or involvement with what would become known as posthumanism and
transhumanism. The first group to use the phrase “industrial music” to
describe their work, Throbbing Gristle, built upon earlier performance
art techniques developed as part of the art collective COUM
Transmissions. Meanwhile, developments in digital technologies
influenced both the formation of industrial music and conceptions of its
relations with the body, as seen in Shinya Tsukamoto’s 1989 film
Tetsuo: The Iron Man, the ambient industrial music of groups such as
Skinny Puppy, Frontline Assembly or Front 242, or the posthumanist
visions of artists such as Stellarc and Genesis P. Orridge. After
finding mainstream success in the late 90s and early 2000s via groups
such as Nine Inch Nails and Ministry, industrial music appeared to enter
a lull, a state of affairs that continued for over a decade until its
metamorphosis into related genres such as industrial metal (Rob Zombie,
3TEETH), hardcore-influenced industrial (Youth Code), multigenre
experimentation (Death Grips), dance music (Chrome Corpse), analog
minimalism (Sally Dige), and queer noise (dreamcrusher).
Recent years have seen a series of books essentially concerned with the
history of industrial music as a historical phenomenon, usually
concentrating on individual groups such as Simon Ford’s The Wreckers of
Civilisation: The Story of COUM Transmissions and Throbbing
Gristle(2003) and Alexei Monroe’s Interrogation Machine: Laibach and the
NSK (2005). Since the revival of interest in industrial music, more
widely thematic titles such as Surhone’s and Timpledon’s Neofolk(2010)
and Karen Collins’ A Bang, A Whimper and A Beat(2012) have begun to
consider wider cultural implications of the genre.
This proposed title will be a collected edition in the series Pop Music,
Culture and Identity, edited by S. Clark, T. Connolly and J. Whittaker
and published by Palgrave (https://www.palgrave.com/gp/series/14537).
Despite assumptions as to the transience of various forms of pop music,
as a cultural medium this has proved to be an enduring art form that has
become extremely important from the mid-twentieth century onwards in
terms of defining identity. The series as a whole, currently comprising
some 24 titles, is dedicated to exploring the impacts of popular music
on cultural formations and gives a particular emphasis to
interdisciplinary approaches that go beyond traditional musicology.
Unique to this series from Palgrave, we encourage the written experience
of an informed fanbase alongside academic methodologies.
Possible themes for this collection include (but are not limited to) the
following:
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Audience Abuse (such as that by bands such as Throbbing Gristle,
Skinny Puppy, GWAR)
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Rivetheads and Fashion
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Electronic Body Music (EBM) and Dance
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Cut-up Techniques for Body and Sound
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Uniforms and Iconography (BDSM)
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Diet
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Animal Rights
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Body as Instrument
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“Listen with Pain!”
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Black Industrial/Industrial Metal
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Body Modification
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Fetishim and Sexualities
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Cultural Appropriation
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Distorted Sounds/Identities and Noise
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Soma Technics
Abstracts of up to 300 words along with a short biographical note (50
words in the same Word document) should be sent to Elizabeth Potter
((emp534 /at/ york.ac.uk)) and Jason Whittaker ((jwhittaker /at/ lincoln.ac.uk)) by 28
February 2020.
*
University of Lincoln <https://www.lincoln.ac.uk/opendays>
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