[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[ecrea] CFP - The Wizard of Oz and the Western Cultural Imagination
Sat Mar 08 01:25:35 GMT 2014
To encourage as broad a disicplinary base as possible, we have decided
to extend the deadline for the below conference for a short period of
time. We welcome proposals from all disciplines to create a unique,
interdisicplinary event. Please get in touch if you have any queries.
The Wizard of Oz and the Western Cultural Imagination: A Conference
celebrating and interrogating 75 years of the MGM Musical
Faculty of Arts, University of Brighton
November 21-22, 2014
CFP Deadline: 31 March 2014
Christmas 2013 saw the annual quest for best television advert, with
firms such as John Lewis, Waitrose, and M&S all participating. Drawing
on themes from Alice in Wonderland, Aladdin, Red Riding Hood and The
Wizard of Oz, the M&S advert is, in the words of the company's business
development director Patrick Bousquet-Chavanne, ‘a modern epic where
fashion meets fantasy’, bringing to life ‘much loved fairy tales with
more than a sprinkle of high glamour’. This advert comes out months
before the 75th anniversary of MGM’s telling of The Wizard of Oz and
demonstrates the lasting legacy this film has had within western culture.
The Wizard of Oz has received sustained interest from audiences,
sparking numerous spinoff films (Return to Oz; Oz: The Great and
Powerful, Yellowbrickroad), musicals (Wicked; The Wiz), and TV
Programmes and documentaries (The Tin Man; The Secret of Oz). Baum’s
original tale has been reanimated and illustrated numerous times (most
recently by Graham Rawle) and the book and film has inspired and
featured in pop music albums by the likes of Elton John (Yellow Brick
Road) and Robbie Williams (Swings Both Ways). The music to MGM’s Wizard
of Oz also contributed to the public responses to the death of Margaret
Thatcher in 2013.
Despite being firmly embedded in the Western cultural imagination, the
legacy of The Wizard of Oz has received rather sparse critical
reception. Taking place in the same month that saw the release of the
film in the UK, this conference seeks to fill this void and explore the
film and its legacy through a series of innovative presentations that
explores ideas such as:
· the Wizard of Oz within American and UK television programming;
· young women’s agency;
· the philosophy of technology;
· representations of twisters, tornados, and hurricanes;
· the politics of Oz;
· Technicolor and the emergence of colour film;
· the Hollywood musical;
· stardom and fandom;
· intermedial history and the story’s migration to other media;
· paratexts, advertising, memorabilia, and tourism;
· music, magic, witches and myth;
· representations of the American rural landscape and the Depression;
· gender and sexuality;
· the Wizard of Oz and cultural capital;
· carnivals, travelling shows, and fairgrounds;
· costume and the iconography of shoes.
· creative explorations of myth.
Proposals are welcomed from all academic disciplines and can take the
form of a paper, performance, artwork or poster presentation. Innovative
presentation formats are encouraged. The conference will include a fancy
dress, sing-along screening of the film.
DEADLINE EXTENDED: Please submit a 300 word abstract to (ozat75 /at/ gmail.com)
by 31 March, 2014. Papers should be 15-20 minutes in length.
Dr Frank Gray (University of Brighton), Dr Louise Fitzgerald (University
of Brighton), Dr Kieran Fenby-Hulse (Bath Spa University)
Conference Twitter Account: @Ozat75 Hashtag: #ozat75
www.arts.brighton.ac.uk/ozat75
---------------
ECREA-Mailing list
---------------
This mailing list is a free service from ECREA and Nico Carpentier.
--
To subscribe, post or unsubscribe, please visit
http://www.ecrea.eu/mailinglist
--
ECREA - European Communication Research and Education Association
--
Postal address:
ECREA
Chaussée de Waterloo 1151
1180 Uccle
Belgium
--
Email: (info /at/ ecrea.eu)
URL: http://www.ecrea.eu
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]