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[ecrea] cfp - Fiction and British Politics
Thu Jul 09 13:18:46 GMT 2009
Call for Papers
Fiction and British Politics
Organised by the Centre for British Politics, University of Nottingham
To be held at the British Academy, Friday 11 December 2009
Since at least Shakespeare?s time, fictions -
whether depicted on the screen, stage or page -
have addressed a wide variety of political
subjects; they have as a consequence helped
inform how Britons think about power, those who
seek it, exercise it, and are subject to it.
Traditionally, fictions were thought to merely
reflect wider values; today their constitutive
role is often emphasised. Indeed, while in the
Cabinet Hazel Blears blamed predominantly
negative depictions of politics for discouraging
people from being politically engaged; and
called for a ?British version? of the West Wing,
hoping more optimistic dramatisations would challenge popular cynicism.
There certainly seems to have been a dramatic
shift in emphasis in how fictions treat
politics. In Can You Forgive Her? (1864),
Anthony Trollope wrote that to be an MP was to
have done ?that which it most becomes an
Englishman to have achieved?; the 2005 film V
for Vendetta ended with the Palace of
Westminster being blown up by a modern-day Guy
Fawkes, to signify the people?s liberation from oppression.
The purpose of this conference is to draw
together academics interested in different
aspects of the relationship between fiction and
British politics, both past and present, as well
as those who have written fictions with
political themes (amongst whom will number
Trevor Griffiths), to assess its significance.
Papers are especially invited on the following topics:
· What themes emerge from political fictions?
· Has there been a change in emphasis over time?
· What has been the role of gender?
· Is British political fiction inherently cynical?
· What do political fictions say about ?Britishness??
· What are the motives of those who write about politics in fiction?
· How is politics is tackled in the US and continental Europe?
· What is the effect of political fiction on audiences and readers?
· What is the relationship between
political fiction and political ?reality??
It is intended that selected contributions will
be published as part of a special edition of
Parliamentary Affairs during 2011.
Those interested in presenting a paper for this
conference on Fiction and British Politics should contact
Professor Steven Fielding of Nottingham
University, with a one page abstract:
<mailto:(Steven.Fielding /at/ Nottingham.ac.uk)>(Steven.Fielding /at/ Nottingham.ac.uk)
Centre for British Politics website:
<http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/politics/cbp/>http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/politics/cbp/
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