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[ecrea] CFP - Watching Politics: an interdisciplinary symposium on the impact of visual culture on politics
Fri Mar 01 15:16:19 GMT 2013
*CALL FOR CONTRIBUTIONS*
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* Watching politics: an interdisciplinary symposium on
the impact of visual culture on politics*
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Friday 31 May 2013*
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*Jointly hosted by the Department of Film and Television Studies and the
Institute of Advanced Study, University of Warwick*
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*Deadline for abstracts: MONDAY 15 APRIL 2013*
This symposium will explore the ideological, psychological and
sociological impact of the ‘aestheticisation’ of politics in mass media
and visual culture – cinema, television, radio, photography and on the
internet. The aestheticisation of politics has been a significant avenue
of popular and scholarly discourse for decades – where once the media’s
influence inspired concern regarding the possibility of demagoguery, it
has now become a discussion about whether it has created a superficial
politics entirely lacking in substance. In its most extreme terms,
visual culture has either humanised politicians and provided clarity to
our political processes, or has resulted in a catastrophic ‘dumbing
down’ of political debate. Where do the answers lie?**
‘New’ media (e.g. user-generated video-streaming platforms such as
YouTube, social networking sites like Twitter) has opened up fresh and
urgent areas to consider: the internet has played significant,
contrasting roles in partly facilitating the ‘Arab Spring’, but also
provided a forum for instantaneous satire of figures like Nick Clegg and
Mitt Romney. Moreover, supposedly ‘old’ media continue to have
significant influence on our understanding and conceptualisation of
political processes and issues – this year’s Oscar-nominated films like
/Argo, Lincoln, Django Unchained /and /Zero Dark Thirty /all generated
significant argument surrounding issues of continued political
importance (American intervention in the Middle East, and the legacies
of slavery).
Cinema, television, radio, photography, and now the transfusion of
aspects of these forms through the internet have had, and continue to
have, enormous impact on our politics. This symposium aims to examine
the contours of this relationship, exploring its historical significance
as well as providing a forum to debate its contemporary effects. Have
these forms played a role in critiquing our politicians and political
processes, or have they provided uncomplicated reinforcement to dominant
ideological and mythological constructs? How have these forms changed
politics, and how might the rapidly changing media environment further
alter our relationship with politics and politicians in the future?
_*20-minute papers might address (but are not limited to) the following
areas:*_
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· * Representations of political processes in cinema and television
· * ‘New’ media and politics: parody and protest
· * Politics and/in digital culture
· * Politicians, performance and the media
· * The political biopic in film and television
· * Politics and television satire
· * Historical perspectives on the impact of media on politics
· * The sociological impact of media on political activity,
engagement and understanding
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*Please send abstracts (max 200 words), and a brief biographical note to
**(G.R.Frame /at/ warwick.ac.uk)* <mailto:(G.Frame /at/ warwick.ac.uk)>* by MONDAY 15
APRIL 2013.*
Thank you and best wishes,
Dr Gregory Frame
Early Career Fellow in the Institute of Advanced Study
University of Warwick
Coventry
Warwickshire
United Kingdom
CV4 7AL
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