[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[ecrea] CFP - Industrial Trends: Genre and the Movie Business Iluminace Special Edition
Sat Apr 16 10:52:38 GMT 2011
Call for Papers
/Iluminace /vol. 3 (2012) – Special English-Language Edition
*Industrial Trends: Genre and the Movie Business*
Conceptions of film categories have served as a longstanding cornerstone
of industry practice, one which preconditions the rationalization of
production decisions, the mobilization of content and themes, the
tailoring of distribution strategies, the formulation of marketing
campaigns, and the nature of exhibition and delivery. Yet, despite calls
for scholars to centralize consideration of industry logic and activity
(Williams; Neale 1990), little is known about the precise and complex
ways in which, what could loosely be called, “genres” have actually
shaped, and continue to shape, the global movie business. The industrial
dimensions of film genre remain sketchily theorized and poorly
understood to such an extent that genre’s contributions to relations
between industrial operations, to the trans-media and transnational
dynamics of global cinema, and to the industrial appropriation of
extra-industrial discourses, remain something of an undiscovered
archipelago obscured by canonicity and epoch-governed historiography.
Nevertheless, an invaluable opportunity to reconsider how genre
influences industry conduct has been provided by three key contributions
to genre studies: recognition of the ever-changing and continuously
contested discursive character of film groupings (Altman; Mittell;
Naremore; Neale 1993); appreciation of the logic and results of
calculatedly “hybrid” approaches to the content of motion pictures and
their marketing campaigns (Altman; Balio; Klinger; Staiger); and deeper
understandings of the opportunistic short-to-medium-term economic logic
that ensures the generation of passing fads, cycles, and trends
(Moretti; Nowell; Romao; Stanfield). Subjecting the industrial character
of film genre to new and sustained scholarly interrogation is therefore
both timely and essential given genre’s status as a governing principle
of industry activity, the impact of which is felt both vertically and
horizontally, cutting, as it does, across the various branches and
sectors of a given industry, as well as across media, across national
borders, and across reception cultures. It is with these points very
much in mind that /Iluminace/, the Czech Republic’s leading film studies
journal, is preparing a special English-language edition which will
focus on how concepts of genre have shaped industrial logic, strategy,
and conduct, in different locations, and at different historical
junctures. Possible topics for essays which will be considered for
inclusion in the special edition therefore include but are not
restricted to:
· theorizing genres industrially
· the logic underwriting hybrid production and promotion strategies
· genres and high-end media properties
· genre in relation to sequels, adaptations, remakes, and “re-boots”
· largely ignored but industrially important product lines, film-types,
and fads
· genre filmmaking and its relationships to topicality and “the newsworthy”
· intersections of public-sphere discourse and industry practice
· the functions and dimensions of genre categories in art and boutique
cinema
· exploitation cinemas and their genres
· cross-media influences on industrial decision-making
· the transnational configurations of film fads, cycles, and trends
· genre’s roles in distribution patterns and strategies
· invoking genres and generic discourse to promote and publicize movies
· genres of extra-filmic epiphenomena: posters, trailers, websites etc ...
· genres and questions of exhibition practice
· packaging and repackaging genre films for home consumption
Please send by 30 June 2011 your 250 word abstract and a short academic
biography to (richard_nowell /at/ hotmail.com)
<mailto:(richard_nowell /at/ hotmail.com)>. All notifications of acceptance
will be emailed no later than 14 July 2011. If an abstract is accepted,
essays are to be 36,000–72,000 signs, which equates roughly to
5,500–9,000 words (including footnotes and a 100–200 word abstract).
This special edition of /Iluminace/ will be published in hardcopy in
2012 and will be accessible online through the EBSCO database.*__*
Yours Sincerely,
Dr. Richard Nowell, Guest Editor, /Iluminace/.
Richard Nowell, currently lecturing in Prague, is the author of /Blood
Money a History of the First Teen Slasher Film Cycle/ and has articles
published or forthcoming in /Cinema Journal/, /Journal of Film and
Video/, /Post Script/, and /The New Review of Film and Television Studies/.
*_Works Cited_*
* *
Altman, Rick. /Film/Genre/. London: BFI, 1999.
Balio, Tino. /Grand Design: Hollywood as a Modern Business Enterprise,
1930–1939 (History of the American Cinema, Volume 5)/. London: Simon &
Schuster Macmillan, 1993.
Klinger, Barbara. “Digressions at the Cinema: Reception and Mass
Culture.” /Cinema Journal/ 28.4 (1989): 3–19.
Mittell, Jason. “A Cultural Approach to Television Genre Theory”,
/Cinema Journal/,/ /40.1 (2001): 3–24.
Moretti, Franco. /Graphs, Maps, Trees/: /Abstract Models for Literary
History/. London: Verso, 2005.
Neale Steve,. “Melo talk: on the meaning of use of the term ‘melodrama’
in the American
trade press”, /The Velvet Light Trap/, 32 (1993): 66–89.
Neale, Steve. “Questions of Genre”, /Screen/, 31.1 (1990): 45–66.
Nowell, Richard. /Blood Money: A History of the First Teen Slasher
Film/. New York: Continuum, 2011.
Romao, Tico. “Engines of Transformation: An Analytical History of the
1970s Car Chase Cycle”, /New Review of Film and Television Studies/, 1.1
(2003): 31–54.
Staiger, Janet. “Hybrid or Inbred: The Purity Hypothesis and Hollywood
Genre History.” /Film Criticism /22.1 (1997): 5–20.
Stanfield, Peter. “Crossover: Sam Katzman’s Switchblade Calypso Bop
Reefer Madness Swamp Girl or ‘Bad Jazz’, Calypso, Beatniks and Rock ’n’
Roll in 1950s Teenpix”, /Journal of Popular Music /29:3 (2010): 437–455.
Williams, Alan, “Is a Radical Genre Criticism Possible?”, /Quarterly
Review of Film Studies/, 9.2: 121–125.
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]