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[Commlist] Call for chapter proposals: Here come the clowns: critical essays on the circus of popular culture
Tue Oct 01 14:37:12 GMT 2024
Here come the clowns: critical essays on the circus of popular culture
The circus, the sideshow, the travelling side show, the freak show and
vaudeville predate film and television but have been richly important
contributors to these later forms of entertainment. Early cinema drew on
the talents and performance styles of circus and vaudevillian
performers. Since the earliest cinema, the circus itself has been an
absorbing focus of interest for the characterful, itinerant and eerie
people who populate them. But as a places of entertainment and
especially of diversion and laughter, circuses and associated places and
spaces have registered recurringly as darkly sinister and frightening,
impressions at odds with their purposes as places of amusement. Cinema
early registered this uncanny and menacing potential in /The Cabinet of
Dr Caligari /(1920) and then /Freaks /(1932). They are places of
entertainment, but when transmuted into other forms the type of
entertainment they provide expands in often unexpected ways.
The circus is versatile in dramatic terms, and appearances of circuses
or their personnel span genres from spy and espionage (/Get Smart,
Octopussy, The Avengers/), grotesque comedy (/The League of Gentlemen,
The Goodies/), horror (/Vampire Circus, Circus of Horrors, It, Killer
Klowns from Outer Space/), zombie films (/Zombieland/) period drama
(/The Elephant Man/), noir (/Nightmare Alley/), rock opera (/Repo! The
Genetic Opera/), the supernatural (/American Horror Story: Freak Show,
Carnivale/), science fiction (/Doctor Who/) and others. In popular
culture, circuses can be everything from covers for international spy
rings, a nest of vampires, an alien’s playground or a murder site.
Individual personnel, most especially the clown, register just as eerily
from Pennywise in /It/ to the titular /The Terrifier /and /House of 1000
Corpses/’s Captain Spaulding and Batman’s Joker, to the dramatizations
of real world killer clowns such as /Gacy/.
However to date comparatively little has been written to explain the
place of the circus in popular culture from the sinister resonances
associated with them to the circus as a place of marvels.
The intention of this collection is to comprehensively interrogate the
cultural messages found in the performances, performance traditions and
performers of the circus as these translate into popular culture. The
way the circus and other types of performance space and traditions and
broken through into popular culture as an influence on film and
television as sources of horror, drama or comedy are welcome ideas.
Possible areas include but are not limited to:
High and low culture
The circus and popular culture practices
The representation of circus history and culture
The circus and early cinema
The circus and material culture
Performance types and traditions transferred to the screen
Circus animals
Race and performance
Transgression
Clowns, circuses and fear
Horror in humor
The circus and symbolism
If you are interested in contributing to this collection, we ask that
you submit an abstract of up to 250 words *by October 25^th * explaining
the focus and approach of your proposed essay. Email
(marcus.harmes /at/ unisq.edu.au) <mailto:(marcus.harmes /at/ unisq.edu.au)> and
(Meredith.harmes /at/ unisq.edu.au) <mailto:(Meredith.harmes /at/ unisq.edu.au)>
The proposed volume is intended to be scholarly but accessible in tone
and approach. Each contribution should be 6000 words.
This collection is under contract with an American publisher.
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