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[ecrea] Peripheral Visions: Suburbs, Representation and Innovation CFP
Wed Sep 22 12:15:32 GMT 2010
Peripheral Visions
Suburbs, Representation and Innovation
Kingston University, United Kingdom, 18-19 June 2011
Recent work in the burgeoning interdisciplinary field of suburban studies
has focused on how suburbs have become increasingly diverse and dynamic
places. Arguably, though, perceptions of suburban life, whether in
executive commuter belts, banlieues or shanty towns, continue to
be dominated by a relatively narrow range of representations. Yet, as
suburbs have emerged, developed and diversified, new forms of creative
production – across film, photography, literature, music and digital
media – have arisen from and in response to them. This two-day conference
will investigate what it is about these seemingly inauspicious
environments and lifestyles that has rendered them so inspirational. It
seeks to illuminate the aesthetic shifts and formal innovations that have
been involved in their representation over the last century, across all
media and genres, and within and across different cultures and
territories. By focusing on such innovations, Peripheral Visions
will interrogate developments to concepts that are central to twentieth
and twenty-first century life, including property, autonomy, consumption
and citizenship.
Confirmed keynote speakers:
Professor Rob Shields (University of Alberta)
Professor Carrie Tarr (Kingston University)
Dr Jo Gill (University of Exeter)
We welcome proposals for panels and papers which explore topics
including, but not limited to:
· Defining suburban aesthetics and
poetics
· Suburbs and genre
· The suburb as fictional
world
· New technologies and
auto-documentary / subcultural production
· Pioneer suburbs and their
representation
· Poverty on the periphery / the
suburbs in economic crisis
· Suburban pasts, suburban
futures
· Representing transnational
suburbs
We also welcome contributions which cross critical/creative
boundaries.
Please submit abstracts (of up to 500 words) online at
http://fass.kingston.ac.uk/activities/conferences/abstracts/ by
01/02/2011. Email enquiries to
(m.dines /at/ kingston.ac.uk) or
(t.vermeulen /at/ let.ru.nl)
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