[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[ecrea] CFP Race and the Cultural Industries: Second Call for Papers
Thu Jun 16 12:35:45 GMT 2011
*Race and the Cultural Industries *
*A one-day conference organised by the Media Industries Research Centre
(MIRC), University of Leeds, in conjunction with the MeCCSA Race Network *
*Wednesday 14th Sept 2011*
* Institute of Communications Studies, University of Leeds, Call for
Papers *
This conference will explore issues of race, the cultural industries and
cultural production. Following Greg Dyke’s famous comment that the BBC
is ‘hideously white’ there has been an increasing recognition of how
non-whites are marginalised in the media – both in terms of
participation and portrayal. Indeed, in recent years there has been
numerous initiatives launched across the cultural sector that have made
efforts to increase and encourage participation from minority
communities. Yet tensions remain regarding social and cultural barriers
to entry as well as critical issues to do with the representation of
non-white groups. The aim of the conference is to go beyond policy
debates and think more critically about the media and identity, and the
cultural politics of race in the West.
'Race and the Cultural Industries' is an interdisciplinary conference
and welcomes papers based on research on all sectors of the media, from
news to entertainment, taken from the UK or more international contexts.
It seeks to encourage participation from cultural practitioners as well
as scholars in order to create a dialogue between research, policy and
practice.
We welcome papers in anything related to the topic of race and the
cultural industries, amongst which might be the following:
• Race and the politics of representation
• The media, multiculturalism and citizenship
• Cultural policy and subsidising culturally diverse arts
• The production of Black and Asian popular culture
• Islamaphobia and the reporting/representation of the ‘War on Terror’
• Institutional racism in the cultural industries
• Audience development and issues of marketing and distributing
culturally diverse arts
• Diasporic media practice
• ‘Glass ceilings’ and the politics of quotas and diversity initiatives
• New media, race and identity
*To submit an abstract (300 words) please email (a.saha /at/ leeds.ac.uk)**.
Deadline for abstracts is 8th July 2011. *
Confirmed speakers are:
Tanika Gupta, MBE – Playwright and screenwriter
Mykaell Riley – Director of Centre for Black Music Research, Ex-Steel
Pulse member and black music historian
Jason Toynbee – Open University
David Hesmondhalgh – University of Leeds
Mark Banks – Open University
Sarita Malik – Brunel University
Ash Sharma – University of East London
Sanjay Sharma – Brunel University
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]