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[ecrea] CFP: Popular Culture and World Politics 7.0
Sun May 18 09:00:06 GMT 2014
Popular Culture and World Politics 7.0
University of Ottawa
Nov. 21-22, 2014
Call for Papers:
Pop culture has never been just about entertainment. It keeps a finger
on society’s ideological pulse and the subjects that matter to the
everyday, including traditional topics that fall within the political arena.
International affairs is more than guns and butter, and constructions of
national identity and the justification of policies are well-established
fields of inquiry. What counts as Canadian and consequently a Canadian
foreign policy? In addition to traditional studies of nationalism and
national identity through official discourse, more research is being
done on the quotidian or day-to-day popular culture of world politics
(Grayson et al. 2009). Debrix (2008), Shapiro (1997), and Weber (2006)
discuss the popular geopolitics of American foreign policy through
analysis of films, journalism, and other popular media.
PCWP is a dynamic, multidisciplinary conference that seeks to explore
the ways in which pop culture reflects, (re)imagines, and even disturbs
the production, consumption, interpretation, and understanding of the
political world. This year, the University of Ottawa seeks to push the
agenda of inquiry into the digital space, where immediate access to
information has created new forms of political engagement and altered
existing forms. Compression of complex ideas into smaller packets
further affects content diffusion and consumption. We are excited to
host the conference in a new, national venue, the Canadian War Museum—to
better highlight both Canada and the role of national institutions in
the discourse on war and world politics.
We are seeking to attract work from social scientists, digital
humanities, and activists/artists who interrogate questions of identity,
culture, violence, power, militarism, political economy, and genre.
Suggested themes for panels, papers, and presentations include (but are
not limited to):
- Canada’s role in the world
- Representations of the Arctic
- Agency and Culture
- Objects of pop culture
- Propaganda/branding
- Identity in film, literature, and ephemera
- Culture of security
- Violence and digital games
- Teaching politics through culture
Events include:
* special screening of “Joystick Warriors: Video Games, Violence, and
the Culture of Militarism” at the Canadian War Museum.
* teaching workshop: “Teaching with Pop Culture”
* publication workshop: “Publishing on Pop Culture”
Please send title, 250 word abstract, and contact information to:
(pcwpvii /at/ gmail.com)
Due: July 1, 2014
Decision: Sept 1, 2014
Conference: Nov 21-22, 2014 @ University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Canada
Tumblr: pcwp7.tumblr.com
Organizing Committee:
Mark B. Salter, Sandra Yao, David Grondin
School of Political Studies, University of Ottawa
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