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[ecrea] CFP: Cops on the Box
Tue Jan 01 20:51:55 GMT 2013
Call for papers: ‘Cops on the Box: Crime Drama on Contemporary UK
Television Screens’.
University of Glamorgan, ATRiuM, Cardiff: Friday March 15th, 2013
Keynote lecture: Professor Charlotte Brunsdon
UK crime drama deserves sustained critical attention from scholars,
students and viewers alike, because it is one of the most important
places in which ideas of justice, transgression, retribution and civic
life are represented and contested. Crime drama offers audiences stories
of right and wrong, moral authority asserted and resisted, professionals
and criminals, and does so in ways that are often highly innovative and
thought-provoking. This is a dynamic genre that is responsive not only
to changing social debates on crime and policing but also to processes
of hybridisation within the television industry itself.
Cops on the Box aims to gather together critical readings of
contemporary British crime drama to examine the industrial, aesthetic
and cultural evolution of the genre by reference to original scholarship
and close readings of specific programmes, their production and
reception. We hope the conference will provide a thorough and
illuminating analysis of crime drama on contemporary UK screens from a
range of theoretical perspectives and will thereby advance scholarship
on this important TV genre.
We welcome twenty-minute papers that address the issues below, but we
are receptive to submissions from all theoretical and empirical approaches:
· Aesthetic and cultural evolution of British crime drama and
the emergence of distinct forms e.g. forensic crime and detective fantasy
· Interrelationship of crime drama and changing social politics
and identities (including sexuality, race, gender, region and class)
· Examinations of how the contemporary TV ecology impacts upon
the development of British crime drama in industrial, aesthetic and
cultural terms
· Impact of imported European (including Scandinavian and
French) and US shows on British crime drama
· Representation of Britishness including how this is exported
to the USA and elsewhere through crime drama
· Adaptations in British crime drama (including literary
adaptations such as Poirot and Sherlock and international exports and
adaptations such as Law and Order UK)
· UK production of historical crime drama, that is crime and
policing set in the past
· Place in UK crime drama, including the importance of place,
region and the rise of international TV tourism (e.g. Lewis/Inspector Morse)
· Reception research on crime drama and its appeal to diverse
audiences
A proposal for an edited collection is in development with University of
Wales Press as part of its Contemporary Landmark Television series,
edited by Prof. Steve Blandford, Prof. Stephen Lacey and Dr Ruth
McElroy. Papers presented at the conference may be considered for
inclusion in the book proposal.
Please send abstracts of no more than 400 words accompanied by a brief
biography to Ben Lamb at (blamb /at/ glam.ac.uk) by January 11th 2013.
Dr Ruth McElroy
Ben Lamb.
Cardiff School of Creative and Cultural Industries,
Atrium,
University of Glamorgan,
86-88 Adam Street,
Cardiff,
CF24 2FN
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