[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[ecrea] cfp: Past the “-Post”: Theorizing the Post-Post-Soviet via (New) Media and Popular Culture
Mon Jan 26 09:48:36 GMT 2015
Past the “-Post”: Theorizing the Post-Post-Soviet via (New) Media and
Popular Culture
REMINDER: Deadline for abstract submission 1 February 2015!
Two-Day Conference, University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands
11-12 June 2015
Sponsored in part by the Amsterdam School for Cultural Analysis
Questions regarding time and temporality have occupied a central
position in relation to both lived experiences and academic explorations
of Soviet and post-Soviet spaces – indeed, the very addition of the
prefix, the “post-” suggests the indispensability of the temporal when
seeking to illuminate the sociocultural/sociopolitical. Scholars from
diverse disciplinary locations (including Epstein, Yurchak, Boym, and
Oushakine, inter alia) have shown the myriad ways that, for example,
memory, nostalgia, and/or desire have been implicated in creations of a
pre-Revolutionary past or a utopian Soviet future, such constructions
being instrumental in the formations of identities, cultural narratives,
or localities. In regards to this last, moreover, some (Clowes;
Dobrenko and Naiman) have called for attention to dynamics of
spatiality, in addition to those of temporality, in relation to the
enterprise of “mapping” the cultural terrain of the [post-] Soviet.
And yet the cultural-spatiotemporal location which engendered the
“post-” has altered radically over the past two-plus decades, the
ensuing landscape often marked by an array of disparate events and
phenomena related to the changes in media and popular culture: Tweets
circulating among and emanating from the protesters at Euromaidan or in
Moscow; Pussy Riot’s various actions posted to YouTube, and the “media
tour” of Tolokonnikova and Alekhina upon release from prison; Russian
legislation banning advertising on pay-television channels, and its
effect on non-state-owned entities such as Telekanal Dozhd; US/EU
popular musics/videos/films ubiquitous on radio stations, television,
and the internet, and now widely available via numerous download sites
or torrents; the broad popularity of Russian detektivy by authors such
as Akunin and Marinina, and their wide availability, as with other
media, online; Russia’s anti-“gay propaganda” law, and the appearance of
internet-based support group for LGBT children/teens, Deti 404; and
numerous others. Our intent in this conference, however, is not to
analyze such phenomena in a cultural context, but to foreground the
cultural context itself – the post-post – via the phenomena.
Understanding, of course, the need for historicizing cultural practice
and product, our guiding question is: how can we, via media and popular
culture, theorize geopolitical and geocultural locations that can no
longer be adequately defined by recourse to a predecessor? What is the
successor to the “post-Soviet”?
Call for Papers
We seek submissions from scholars working in diverse fields (media
studies, anthropology, sociology, musicology, film/television studies,
political science, literary studies/comparative literature, cultural
studies, among others), as our intent is to facilitate a dialogue that
is as interdisciplinary as possible. Proposals for individual papers
(20 minutes) or panels are welcome. Please send abstracts of 350-400
words (450-550 words for panels), with name(s), title(s), and academic
affiliation(s) (if applicable) and a very brief biographical summary.
Please send abstracts to (poposocon /at/ gmail.com) by no later than 1 February
2015. You may address any inquiries to the same email address.
Keynote Speaker
Dr. Yngvar B. Steinholt, Associate Professor, Tromsø University,
Institute of Culture and Literature, Norway
Dr. Steinholt is co-author of Punk in Russia: Cultural Mutation from the
“Useless” to the “Moronic” (Routledge 2014), and has published
extensively on popular music in the Soviet Union and Post-Soviet Russia.
His current research interests include contemporary Russian art (and)
activism, noise studies, and sound in literature.
Conference Organizers
Stephen Amico
Assistant Professor, Departments of Music and Media Studies, University
of Amsterdam
Sudha Rajagopalan
Assistant Professor, Departments of East European Studies and Media
Studies, University of Amsterdam
S.R. Amico
Assistant Professor
Departments of Media Studies and Music
University of Amsterdam
---------------
ECREA-Mailing list
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier and ECREA.
--
To subscribe, post or unsubscribe, please visit
http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
URL: http://homepages.vub.ac.be/~ncarpent/
--
ECREA - European Communication Research and Education Association
Chaussée de Waterloo 1151, 1180 Uccle, Belgium
Email: (info /at/ ecrea.eu)
URL: http://www.ecrea.eu
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]