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[ecrea] CALL FOR PAPERS: The Pleasures and Politics of Popular Erotic Fiction (Edited Collection)
Sun Feb 10 05:32:15 GMT 2013
CALL FOR PAPERS: The Pleasures and Politics of Popular Erotic Fiction
(Edited Collection)
The publication of EL James’ Fifty Shades of Grey in 2011 marks a
particularly visible moment in what appears to be a proliferation of
erotic fiction, written by and for women, since the end of the twentieth
century. More than just an instance of a particular genre of fiction,
Fifty Shades has spawned considerable discussion of the significance of
‘women’s popular erotic fiction’ generally.
The Pleasures and Politics of Popular Erotic Fiction seeks to explore
this phenomenon, its social and textual origins and its attendant
conceptual and political effects. In doing so, the book aims to examine
the discursive regularities and popular debates framing the production
and reception of women’s popular erotic fiction; the cultural anxieties
and transformations such texts express; the ways in which they
reinscribe and negotiate relations of gender, sexuality, race, and
kinship. We are interested in exploring the ideological forces
underpinning their development and visibility as both a ‘new’ and
‘popular’ form; the ever-growing proliferation of subgenres and their
role in shaping popular ideas about romance, relationships, desire, and
the erotic.
We invite proposals for contributions to an edited collection of
critical research on the cultural significance of ‘women’s popular
erotic fiction’. Possible areas of research include (though are not
limited to):
· The cultural work of the different subgenres (BDSM, paranormal
romance, erotic crime fiction, ménage a trois, ‘neighbour from hell’,
sex confessionals) and the ways of speaking about, categorising and
marketing these texts.
· The rise of independently published online erotic fiction (production
and consumption) and the discourses surrounding it.
· Debates around originality and derivativeness.
· The continuities and departures of erotic fiction from its
predecessors in romance fiction and chick lit, as well as those from
more ‘respectable’ literary traditions.
· The role of popular erotic fiction in reinforcing and/or transgressing
the hegemony of whiteness, heterosexuality, patriarchy, the family, etc.
· The role of this fiction in circumscribing an idea of ‘the West’, as
well as the possibilities offered by non-western forms of popular erotic
fiction.
· The pleasures of reader consumption and the discourses surrounding it.
· The function of romance in women’s erotic fiction.
Expressions of interest, including an abstract (250-300 words), a short
author bio and list of recent publications, may be forwarded via email
to the editors by 24 May, 2013. The anticipated due date for accepted
contributions (6,500 –7,500) is 29 November, 2013.
Dr Kristen Phillips, Claire Trevenen, Curtin University (Bentley,
Western Australia)
Contact email: (k.phillips /at/ curtin.edu.au), (Claire.Trevenen /at/ curtin.edu.au)
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