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[ecrea] CFP: Popular Music Fandom and the Public Sphere: A One Day Symposium
Wed Nov 12 14:54:58 GMT 2014
CFP: Popular Music Fandom and the Public Sphere: A One Day Symposium
University of Chester,
Friday, 10th April 2015
Keynote speaker: Dr Cornel Sandvoss, University of Surrey
In the mainstream media, postwar popular music fandom has traditionally
been associated with collective displays of emotion. Yet fandom is
actually about a range of things: shared tastes and personal
convictions, individual subjectivity and wider community. Fandom does
not exist entirely in private nor entirely in public, but is
characterized a process of continual mediation between the two. Jürgen
Habermas’s concept of the public sphere suggests that shared spaces of
discussion have political consequences, making the crossing of the
private/public boundary a political act. It is possible for fans to have
relatively public experiences in private and private experiences in
public. What new forms of public sphere does popular music fandom
create? Edward Comentale suggested that Elvis Presley created a “public
sphere within the public sphere.” Furthermore, both ‘the public’ and
‘the private’ are transforming in a networked society and neoliberal
era. As communities of imagination, fan bases are providing new models
for public activism based on shared values. Fandom can therefore help to
indicate where conceptions of the private and public might require some
reformulation. We invite papers associated with this subject on specific
topics such as the following:
* Closet popular music fandom
* Fandom and intimacy
* Music fan diaries and confessionals
* Voyeurism and fandom
* Fan mail and its representation
* ‘Masses’ and ‘manias’ - collective fandom in the mass broadcast era
* Fan communities as their own public spheres
* Fandom, festivals and spectacles
* Collecting, exhibiting and curating and music fandom
* Genre fandom and the public sphere
* Fan philanthropy and activism
* Fan productivity as social commentary
* ‘Drive by’ media, news and documentary portrayals
* Interaction on social media
* Fandom, affect and the public display of emotion
* The public/private boundary and historical fan studies
* Abject heroes and music fan shame
Papers will be 20 minutes in length with 10 minutes for questions.
Please send an abstract of no more than 300 words and a bio of no more
than 50 words to: (m.duffett /at/ chester.ac.uk) - before Wednesday,
19thNovember, 2014.
Organized by:
Dr Mark Duffett, University of Chester.
Dr Koos Zwaan, InHolland University of Applied Sciences.
This event is free to staff and students from any university. Click here
to register.
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