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[Commlist] Call for papers: The State of the Nation in film and television, London Metropolitan University, online conference
Wed Jan 10 22:38:23 GMT 2024
_Call for papers: _*_The State of the Nation in film and television_*_,
London Metropolitan University, online conference, 3_^_rd_ _July 2024. _
How might we illustrate, explore, and begin to define the state of the
nation film and television text? This free online conference invites
consideration of these questions. The contours of the genre and tropes
are fluid, and often the term is retrospectively ascribed. Typically,
there is a distinction between a National Cinema which might foster an
imagined community and identity, and concern instead with reflection,
commentary, and critique of the state of the nation, a mirror (often
cracked) held up to the nation. At best the state of the nation text
captures the zeitgeist, shines a light on issues and inequities, serves
public commentary, garners popular support and critical acclaim. Here
film and TV can serve the function of unflinchingly presenting a nation
to itself. As a compression and convergence of key issues of the times,
played out through representative characters, the state of the nation
text helps us interrogate past, present, and future. The concern with
film and TV as fourth estate critique is underscored. A key
characteristic of the state of the nation text is to seek to do justice
to the varying politico-socio-cultural conflicts characteristic of the
period. How does the state of the nation text do this? What are the core
attributes of the state of the nation text?
To what extent must it offer explicit critique? How far could a
definition stretch to include the subtextual, the metaphorical and
allegorical? How might it help construct or challenge the nation as a
category? Can the success or not be evaluated? If it is often assumed to
offer progressive or radical critique, is there space for a conservative
or reactionary state of the nation text? There has been a shift away
from the realist conventions that typified the text and an embrace of
the more personal aspects of art cinema, with degrees of stylisation,
and perhaps even the avant-garde (/Bait, /2019). The genre is also
interwoven with coming-of-age narratives (/Fish Tank/, 2009), and other
genres such as the political thriller, crime, comedy and satire. There
are forward-looking anticipations embracing science fiction tropes
(/Years and Years/, 2019) and historical considerations (the /Small
Axe/ anthology, 2020) which speculate on the future, or interrogate the
past, for the sake of the present. How mutable is the state of the
nation text? Can we still speak of the state of the nation in such
global times? What of regionality and the local? What of the state of
the world text recognising no borders?
Papers are invited that analyse classical and contemporary exemplars of
the state of the nation text; consider production and reception;
question and explore the boundaries of the genre; trace continuities and
changes; help define by comparison and contrast with, for instance,
National Cinema(s), transnational cinema, heritage, and Social Realism;
and themes that otherwise scrutinise and draw attention to this
form. Topics might include, but not be limited to:
* The state of the nation film and tv text: definitions, as a genre
* Rereading the canon
* Theatre and literary antecedents
* Function / successes / failures
* Readings and receptions
* Aesthetics
* Waves
* As documentary
* As an exploration of gender / race / class
* Acting and the face of the nation
* Location: the place of the nation
* The sound(track) of the nation
* Auteurs of the state of the nation
* European, international, and global variations.
The conference will be held virtually at London Metropolitan University
on Wednesday 3rd July 2024. *Abstracts of 400 words for 20 minute
presentations are requested, accompanied by biographies of 250 words by
Monday 26^th February 2024. Acceptance notification: Monday 25^th March
2024.* Please send abstracts and any questions/suggestions to the
conference convenors, Jon Baldwin, (j.baldwin /at/ londonmet.ac.uk)
<mailto:(j.baldwin /at/ londonmet.ac.uk)> and Dr Jeremy Collins
(j.collins /at/ londonmet.ac.uk) <mailto:(j.collins /at/ londonmet.ac.uk)> .
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