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[ecrea] CFP Ray Browne Conference
Wed Nov 07 13:38:18 GMT 2012
*Ray Browne Conference on Popular Culture "Modes of Mobility: Popular
Culture in an Age of Technology"*
February 8 -- February 10, 2013
Bowling Green State University
Bowling Green, Ohio
http://bgsu.orgsync.com/org/pcsa/conference
To build on the success of the First Annual Ray Browne Conference, and
usher in the fortieth year of the Popular Culture Department at Bowling
Green State University, the Popular Culture Scholars Association at BGSU
would like to invite any and all students (undergraduates and graduate),
scholars, critics, former members of the POPC program and friends of the
department to join us for the Ray Browne Conference on Popular Culture
to be held February 8th through February 10th 2013, on the campus of
Bowling Green State University.
Dr. Ray Browne founded the department of Popular Culture to give
students an opportunity to academically consider the cultural forms of
their everyday lives. In the past forty years, popular culture has only
grown more prominent in society and developed new ways of engaging the
public. Popular culture has become increasingly mobile through smart
phones, webisodes, memes, and social media blurring the boundaries
between producers and consumers. Simultaneously, cultures in general
have become increasingly mobile through the spread of and contact
between peoples, ideas and technology; making the production and
consumption of culture a truly transnational affair. In light of
increased cultural mobility made possible by new modes of technology, we
must consider how popular culture scholarship has grown (and can
continue to grow) to accommodate such new cultural modalities.
Potential topics for papers, panels, and roundtable proposals include,
but are not limited to:
. How has the increased mobility in terms of culture, people, and
technology had an effect on appropriation of cultures,
(anti)nationalism, social and political change, tourism, diasporic
experiences and how do we begin to theorize these interactions?
. How do we reimagine/reconstruct literatures, languages, narratives and
identities in cyber societies? Has transmedia and convergence culture
shaped our interaction with popular texts and affected pop cultural
narratives?
. How has new media shaped interactions between popular culture and
individuals?
. With increasing shifts in culture, have there been similar shifts in
the representation of disabled, gender, sexual, race, and ethnic identities?
. Which new media, texts, genres, etc. deserve attention from academics
and scholars?
. How have these shifts altered the study popular culture, and how do we
continue to explore them?
. Explorations of specific popular culture texts, genres, trends and
approaches
The deadline for proposals is Friday, November 16, 2012. Individual
paper proposals should be between 300-400 words. Full roundtable and
panel theme proposals can be longer, but should include as much
prospective information about the topic and number of possible
participants as possible. Please email your abstract and a short
biography to (bgpcsa /at/ gmail.com) <http://(bgpcsa /at/ gmail.com)/>. The subject
line should contain the writer's surname followed by "BCPC13" Abstract.
Notifications for decisions will be sent by Friday, December 15, 2012.
Please contact PCSA if you have any questions or concerns at
(bgpcsa /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(bgpcsa /at/ gmail.com)> or via our website at
bgsu.orgsync.com/org/pcsa <http://bgsu.orgsync.com/org/pcsa>.
*Deadline: November 16, 2012*
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