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[Commlist] cfp: IASPM-US 2022 Conference: Grooves and Movements
Tue Aug 24 07:22:25 GMT 2021
IASPM-US 2022 Conference: Grooves and Movements
Where: Ann Arbor/Detroit Michigan. When: May
26-May 28, 2022
Dates and Place: The International Association for the Study of Popular
Music-United States chapter (IASPM-US) invites proposals for its annual
conference, which will take place in Ann Arbor at the University of
Michigan on May 26-28, 2022. We welcome abstracts for individual papers,
organized panels, roundtable discussions, and alternative (non-paper)
presentations on all aspects of popular music, broadly defined, from any
discipline or profession. We especially encourage submissions on the
many rich popular music histories of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and Detroit.
COVID-19: IASPM-US will continue to monitor the impact of the ongoing
pandemic and make appropriate adjustments as necessary. IAPSM-US will
abide by the safety measures and protocols of our host institution, the
University of Michigan, including vaccination mandates and mask
requirements.
Theme and Events: As the COVID-19 pandemic continues to normalize
virtual connections in local and global settings and to reconfigure
physical spaces for social distancing, the present moment calls for an
examination of the virtual and physical modalities of music-making. The
theme for this year’s conference “Grooves and Movements” intersects with
Detroit and its storied place in rhythm and blues, rock, punk, hip-hop,
and electronic dance music, and is intended to connect the histories,
philosophies, and practices of urban spaces to other historical and
global popular music communities.
The theme “Grooves and Movements” also reflects on how music, sound, and
dance, can help imagine, shape, and define temporalities in virtual and
physical spaces, whether they be a nostalgic past, a future of
liberation, an uncertain present, or a break from perceived time.
Grooves not only recall the materiality of sound as engraved in vinyl to
signal specific eras of musical practice and consumption; it also
denotes the synchronicity of multiple bodies and sounds that allow for
experiences of time through shared aesthetics (jazz, hip-hop, techno…).
Movements help define sound as vibrations that travel and reverberate on
human bodies who then interpret them as pitch, timbre, and rhythm, and
may in turn move to them in dance. Movements also evoke the political
and social movements that music helps advance. Not coincidentally, this
year’s conference dovetails with the Movement Electronic Music Festival,
an annual event held in Detroit, the city where amidst the urban flight
to the suburbs and the economic downturn of the 1980s, Black artists
birthed the futuristic sound of Techno. Recently, calls for racial
justice in response to police brutality have revived conversations on
Afro Pessimism, Black Fugitivity, and Black temporalities, which invite
us to consider how grooves and movements may offer tools to conceive a
world-in-the-making with new possibilities for minoritized communities.
Using the historical, musical, and physical spaces of Detroit and the
virtual spaces of the COVID era as starting points, we invite all
investigations of popular music that engage with these themes and others
to join our conference.
This year’s conference will feature panels by the recent winners of the
Guthrie book award, prominent women musicians in Detroit’s music
industry, DJs participating in the Movement festival, a discussion with
author Regina Bradley on her recent work on hip hop, and a visit to the
Detroit record label Third Man Records, highlighting the recent album
release by Michigan Tejano artist Martín Solís.
About IASPM-US: IASPM-US is a multidisciplinary organization, and
invites proposals from across all fields of scholarly inquiry.
Conference proposals from intellectuals from outside of academia,
including K-12 teachers, museum and archive professionals, musicians and
music professionals, and independent scholars, are encouraged. IASPM-US
is also a friendly conference for students at all levels. We especially
welcome proposals from members of underrepresented groups including, but
not limited to, women, Black/African American, Indigenous, and People of
Color, disabled individuals, and people from LGBTQ+ communities, as well
as people of different ages, socio/economic classes, nationalities, and
religions.
Presentation Formats and Submission Instructions: To facilitate
networking among the membership, support local artists and venues, and
take advantage of various activities and events programmed for the
conference, IASPM-US encourages physical attendance at the conference.
While IASPM-US will also accept proposals for virtual presentations and
plans to make virtual participation to some events available to members
unable to attend in person, we cannot guarantee our ability to
accommodate all requests for virtual participation.
Please submit proposals via Google Forms using the link below no later
than midnight (Eastern Standard Time) October 15, 2021. The form will
collect information such as the presenter’s name, institutional
affiliation (if any), current email address (required for program
decisions and conference communications), current membership status in
IASPM, the intention to present in person (encouraged) or virtually, and
a 100-word bio.
Individual submissions should include a paper title, the
presenter’s name, contact information, a 250-word abstract, and a list
of 3-5 keywords. Abstracts should identify the methodology used, state
the paper’s goals, summarize the context and argument of the paper, and
include a brief conclusion.
Organized panels, consisting of 3-4 papers, should include a
250-word description of the panel’s rationale and goals, a 250-word
abstract for each individual participating in the panel, and a list of
3-5 keywords.
Roundtables, consisting of a moderated conversation with 4-6
participants, require a single 250-word abstract, a list of 3-5
keywords, a list of roundtable members, and should designate one person
as the panel chair.
Alternative presentations should include a 250-word description of
the presentation, a list of 3-5 keywords, the delivery format, and
special requirements beyond standard AV-equipment.
Individual presentations may last up to 20 minutes with a 10-minute
question and answer period. Roundtables and organized panels can be
allotted up to a two-hour time slot. Abstracts not adhering to the word
count will not be considered.
Submission link: https://forms.gle/ibNrQUDPpAnN2yQg9
Please note: All conference presenters must be IASPM members by the time
they register for the conference. For membership and conference
information visit: https://iaspm-us.net/
This year’s program committee consists of Andrés Amado (chair), Rebekah
Farrugia, Kimberly Mack, Jane Mathieu, Lee Tyson, and Corey Miles. You
may direct questions to Andrés Amado at (iaspmus.conference /at/ gmail.com).
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