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[eccr] CSAA Conference 2004 -- CFP -- Please circulate widely
Fri Mar 26 07:34:30 GMT 2004
>Everyday Transformations
>
>The Twenty-First Century Quotidian
>
>
>
>Annual conference of the Cultural Studies Association of Australasia,
>Perth / Fremantle, 9-11 December 2004
>
>Call for Papers
>
>
>
>New technologies, increasing work pressures, changing gender roles and
>family structures, increasing flows of refugees and asylum seekers,
>concerns about security, environmental risks, the escalating speed and
>complexity of social transactions - everyday life is today a terrain of
>rapid and unsettling change. Yet it retains associations also with
>pattern, order, routine - the familiarity of a favourite soap opera or
>talk show, the ordinary pleasures and irritations of shopping, cooking,
>negotiating traffic, managing domestic life.
>
>How should cultural studies address questions of everyday life in the
>twenty-first century? The field can claim a rich tradition of work in the
>area, from ethnographies of street subcultures and shopping centres to
>writing on television and popular magazines. But everyday life has been
>transformed in significant ways since the time of many of the founding
>contributions. What remains relevant today in the study of everyday life?
>To what extent do we need new concepts and categories?
>Transformations have also occurred in cultural studies' motivations for
>engaging with everyday life. The everyday is a major point of intersection
>for many of its intellectual tributaries, including British cultural
>studies, feminism, semiotics, European surrealism, situationism,
>psychoanalysis and ethnomethodology. Yet the context for all of these has
>been affected by major shifts in the location of cultural studies, the
>nature and priorities of higher education, by the increasing market
>orientation of mainstream institutions and by conservative attempts to lay
>claim to the 'ordinary' and 'mainstream'. What do we seek now in engaging
>with the everyday? What understanding of this engagement is most
>appropriate for the times?
>
>Possible sessions/themes:
>& New technologies & Speed and time
>& Suburbia & Everyday sexualities
>& Television & Collections and archives
>& Food & Popular media
>& Magazine journalism & Cultural geographies
>& Everyday spirituality & Sport
>& Ordinariness & Music
>& Shopping & Tourism
>& Civility and manners & Documentary
>& Creativity & Sustainability
>& Homes and gardens & The apocalyptic and the everyday
>& Risk and stress & Dance
>& Globalisation & Political activism in everyday life
>
>Abstracts of no more than 250 words for single papers, or suggestions for
>panel sessions, should be sent to:
>Mark Gibson - (mgibson /at/ central.murdoch.edu.au)
>
>or : School of Media, Communication and Culture
> Murdoch University
> South St, Murdoch
> WA 6150
>
>Panel proposals are particularly welcome.
>
>Refereed Publication Option: As an innovation on past CSAA conferences,
>'Everyday Transformations' will also be offering the option of refereed
>publication in electronic conference proceedings. To be considered for
>this stream, full papers must be received by 27 August 2004.
>Deadline for submission of abstracts: 30 July 2004
>
>--
>
>Dr Mark Gibson
>Lecturer, Cultural Studies
>School of Media Communication and Culture
>Murdoch University
>Western Australia 6150
>
>Editor, Continuum - Journal of Media and Cultural Studies
>http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/carfax/10304312.html
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Carpentier Nico (Phd)
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European Consortium for Communication Research
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E-mail: (Nico.Carpentier /at/ kubrussel.ac.be)
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