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[ecrea] Popular Music and Society Special Issue CFP
Tue Oct 27 16:30:35 GMT 2009
POPULAR MUSIC AND SOCIETY
CALL FOR PAPERS
Special Issue:
Michael Jackson: Musical Subjectivities
Edited by Susan Fast and Stan Hawkins
Submissions are invited for a special edition of Popular Music and 
Society that examines constructions of subjectivity in Michael 
Jackson's music, with a focus on gender, sexuality, age, disability, 
and race. Contributors are invited to address ways in which 
Jackson's vocality, grooves, rhythmic invention, songwriting, 
conformity with and/or irreconcilability of generic categories, 
particular songs, song categories (such as ballads) or albums, 
record production, use of technology, and live or mediated 
performance work to produce his own, often spectacularized, 
subjectivities, as well as those of his listeners.  We are 
interested in drawing together articles that engage in an 
interdisciplinary manner the myriad ways in which subjectivity is 
constructed in Jackson's work: narratives of desire, healing, 
redemption, anger, violence, celebrity; engagement with world 
politics, charity; intergenerational relationships; the spectacular 
body in performance; illness as it impacted his music and 
performance; freakishness/the fantastic; challenges to hegemonic 
constructions of race, masculinity, sexuality, gender--to name only 
a few possibilities.  Although we welcome contributions that employ 
a broad range of methodologies, including the development of new 
methodologies for the analysis of popular music, we intend that 
these essays address musical sound and sound related to text 
(lyrics), image(s), and dance directly.  While the complexity, 
ambiguity, and irreconcilability of Jackson's subjectivity/ies have 
been covered exhaustively, mainly by the mass media, only a few 
scholarly essays have made significant inroads to understanding 
these phenomena; moreover, none of these has addressed musical sound 
in detail.  We therefore see the need for rigorous scholarship into 
Jackson's creative output, with specific emphasis on musical sound, 
the place where he, himself, arguably commented most explicitly upon 
the matters referred to above.  Our vision is that this issue will 
include essays that range over Jackson's long career, from his time 
with the Jackson 5 through his last studio album, Invincible, and 
final live performances, perhaps including the forthcoming film 
documenting preparation for his This Is It tour.
Essays of 6,000-8,000 words are due by September 2010.  Essays will 
be peer-reviewed.  Inquiries regarding potential essay topics and 
their suitability for inclusion are welcome.  Please include your 
professional/academic affiliations, a postal address, and preferred 
email contact with your essay; for purposes of blind peer-review, 
please do not include your name within the body of the essay.
Please address all communications to: Susan Fast (McMaster 
University, Canada) (fastfs /at/ mcmaster.ca) or Stan Hawkins (University 
of Oslo) (e.s.hawkins /at/ imv.uio.no)
--
Susan Fast
Professor
Department of English and Cultural Studies
McMaster University
CNH 310
Hamilton, Ontario
Canada L8S 4L9
(905) 525 9140 ext. 23670
email:  (fastfs /at/ mcmaster.ca)
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Nico Carpentier (Phd)
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Vrije Universiteit Brussel - Free University of Brussels
Centre for Studies on Media and Culture (CeMeSO)
Pleinlaan 2 - B-1050 Brussels - Belgium
T: ++ 32 (0)2-629.18.56
F: ++ 32 (0)2-629.36.84
Office: 5B.401a
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European Communication Research and Education Association
Web: http://www.ecrea.eu
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E-mail: (Nico.Carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
Web: http://homepages.vub.ac.be/~ncarpent/
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