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[Commlist] CFP Replaying Communism: Cultural Memories of Soviet Occupation in European Media Symposium
Thu May 25 17:49:41 GMT 2023
We warmly invite submissions to the online symposium "Replaying
Communism: Cultural Memories of Soviet Occupation in European Media",
which will take place on 1 December 2023. Please check our website (link
below) or direct enquiries to (replayingcommunism /at/ gmail.com).
Replaying Communism: Cultural Memories of Soviet Occupation in European
Media
Online symposium: 1 December 2023
Funded by: AHRC
University of Reading, United Kingdom
Deadline: 29 August 2023
Submission portal:
https://sites.google.com/view/replayingcommunism/symposium/submit-a-proposal
In 1988, on 15 March, a day synonymous with national independence and
democracy, over 10,000 Hungarians chanted Sándor Petőfi’s infamous
poetic cry – ‘no more shall we be slaves’ – as they formed the largest
anti-Government demonstration since the 1956 Revolution. Taking place
exactly 140 years after Petőfi led Hungary’s rebellion against Habsburg
rule, this demonstration highlighted the nation’s desperation for ‘Press
Freedom’, ‘Real Reforms’, and ‘Freedom of Assembly’, as the protesters
wrote on their banners. Thirty-five years later, students at the Budenz
Elementary and High School in Budapest gave a musical performance about
Petőfi’s life and poetry during the 15 March celebrations. Like the
anti-Habsburg and then anti-Communist protests, students evoked
similarly anti-establishment sentiments when they regaled Petőfi’s ‘Hang
the kings!’ Recognising the political resonance of the performance, the
school’s principal, József Csenki, immediately banned its next scheduled
performance in fear of, it has been widely acknowledged, negative
associations with the current Prime Minister, Viktor Orbán.
Orbán’s imposition of restrictions on a free media and, by extension, on
the freedom of expression for Hungarian school children may have seemed
all too familiar to those who experienced life during the 'Goulash
Communism' years under János Kádár. The Guardian highlighted such
parallels in a report (published on 2 April 2022) that quoted a
Hungarian journalist, who wanted to remain anonymous, describing Orbán’s
media control as being ‘much much worse than it was back in the 1980s
when Hungary was a communist country’. With a politically controlled
media regulatory authority, state intervention in the media market, and
the widespread erosion of media pluralism and freedom of expression, it
is hardly surprising that contemporary creative industries are engaged
deeply in this debate.
The AHRC funded ‘Replaying Communism’ project, to which this symposium
belongs, is investigating this phenomenon in its analyses of television
shows that situate the viewer in Communist and Postcommunist Hungary,
such as A Besúgó (HBO Max, 2022-) and Aranyélet (HBO Hungary, 2015-18).
Similar political and cultural trends can be identified across former
Soviet satellite states with television series such as Poland’s 1983
(Netflix, 2018), Czechia's Mamon (HBO Europe, 2015), and Germany’s
Deutschland ’83 (Sundance TV, 2015), and gaining widespread popularity
across the former Soviet bloc and beyond. This symposium seeks to move
beyond Hungary in its engagement in widespread discussions about
twenty-first-century media portrayals of the Communist occupation of
Central and Eastern Europe (1945-1990). To do so, we ask:
1. Why is contemporary media ‘replaying communism’?
2. How does this media represent the communist past?
3. What can we gain from both scholarly and creative engagements with
the synergies between the Communist era and today?
We are keen to analyse cultural memories of the Communist era in fictive
and non-fictive accounts, and across all media. Any chosen critical,
theoretical, methodological, or disciplinary perspective is therefore
welcome. We hope that this symposium will provide researchers interested
in interdisciplinary (especially political and artistic) approaches to
media with rigorous and engaging discussions concerning creative and/or
theoretical methodologies in response to the theme of representing
communism.
We welcome a wide range of perspectives and encourage analyses that
explore of former Soviet satellite states through, but not limited to,
the following lines of inquiry: nostalgia for communism or Ostalgie;
postcommunism and revolution; postcommunism and nationalism;
postcommunist generations; cultural heritage; monuments and statues;
museum studies; archiving communism; music; visual arts; performance;
literature; film; journalism; television; video games.
The symposium is open to postgraduates, ECRs, senior academics, and
archivists interested in how contemporary media informs our
understanding of the experience of life under Communist rule. Please
submit abstracts (250 words), including a title, and short bio (100
words) by 29 August 2023. Papers must be between 15 – 20 minutes in
length. We aim to respond to all applicants with a decision on their
submission by 8 September 2023. Please note that as this symposium will
take place online, there is no symposium fee.
You can submit here:
https://sites.google.com/view/replayingcommunism/symposium/submit-a-proposal?authuser=0
If you are interested in attending this online event, but do not wish to
present a paper, please contact us directly via email. The conference
programme will be posted on our webpage in due course. Please address
any questions you may have to (replayingcommunism /at/ gmail.com).
We look forward to hearing from you!
Dr Anna Váradi and Dr Lucy Jeffery.
Replaying Communism project
https://sites.google.com/view/replayingcommunism
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