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[ecrea] CfP: Fantasies of Contemporary Culture
Mon Jan 25 22:30:27 GMT 2016
Please find attached a call for papers for a one-day symposium at
Cardiff University, entitled 'Fantasies of Contemporary Culture'.
The symposium will take place on on 23 May, 2016. The call for abstracts
closes on 21 March, 2016. Keynote speakers will be Dr Mark Bould (UWE
Bristol) and Dr Catherine Butler (Cardiff, ENCAP). More information can
be found on our website: http://culturalfantasies.wordpress.com.
All the best,
Tom
Dr Tom Harman
School of English, Communication and Philosophy
Cardiff University
Fantasies of Contemporary Culture
Cardiff University, 23 May 2016
Call for Papers
Keynote speakers:
Dr. Mark Bould (UWE Bristol)
Dr. Catherine Butler (Cardiff University)
From the record-breaking sales of J. K. Rowling’s Harry Potter series, both in print and on film, to the phenomenal success of various forms of hyperreal ‘reality television’, contemporary Western culture seems singularly obsessed by the spectacular and the fantastic. This desire to experience other(ed) realities is also evidenced by the continued popularity of neo-historical literature and period drama, the domination of Hollywood cinema by superhero movies, and by the apocalyptic and dystopian imagery that abounds across genres and target audiences. With a long critical and cultural history, conceptualised by scholars as diverse as Tzvetan Todorov, Farah Mendlesohn, John Clute, Brian Attebery, Fredric Jameson, Lucie Armitt, and Darko Suvin, fantasy has arguably become the dominant mode of popular storytelling, supplanting the narrative realism of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
Rather than attempting to define fantasy, horror, weird, or science
fiction as distinct genres, we wish to take up Katheryn Hume’s expansive
definition of fantasy as anti-mimetic, or as ‘any departure from
consensus reality’ (Fantasy and Mimesis, 1984, p. 21), in order to
engage with the broader artistic motivation to question the limits of
the real. This symposium, then, will explore the political and cultural
functions of such fantasies. To what extent does the impulse to create
fantasy art comment back upon this ‘consensus reality’, and to what
extent does it represent a separate reality? How might the fantastical
characters and environments that populate our contemporary cultural
landscape be informed by the experience of twenty-first-century
metropolitan life, and how do such texts (in)form that experience in return?
Roger Schlobin claims that the ‘key to the fantastic is how its
universes work, which is sometimes where they are, but is always why and
how they are’ (‘Rituals' Footprints Ankle-Deep in Stone’, 2000, p. 161).
With this claim in mind, we invite submissions from any discipline that
address the relationship between current cultural, social and political
dialogues and fantasy texts – specifically ones that interrogate
dominant structures of power, normativity and ideology. Suggested topics
include, but are not limited to, the relationship between fantasy texts
and contemporary culture through the lens of:
• Theories of fantasy
• Ideology and world building
• Ecological fantasies
• Escapism
• Cognitive mapping
• Utopian/dystopian vision
• Categories of monstrosity and perfection
• The humanities (fantasies, futures)
• Capitalist critique
• Genre studies/border crossings
• Age studies (childhood fantasy versus adult fantasy)
• Gender studies
• Alternate histories and retrofuturism
• Postcolonial fantasy (incl. Welsh)
• Nationalism and politics
• Inequality and race relations
We welcome paper and panel proposals from postgraduate students,
independent researchers, affiliated scholars, writers, and artists from
any background or career phase. Paper proposals must be between 200-300
words; panel proposals should be between 400-500 words. Please send
abstracts, including your name and e-mail, institutional affiliation (if
any), and a short biography (100 words maximum), to Dr Tom Harman
((HarmanTL /at/ cardiff.ac.uk)) and Megen de Bruin-Molé
((DeBruinMJ /at/ cardiff.ac.uk)) by 21 March.
The programme will include coffee/tea breaks, lunch, and a wine
reception. This will be covered in the registration fee (£10 for
students and part-time staff, £20 for salaried staff). For more
information and updates, please visit the symposium website at
http://culturalfantasies.wordpress.com.
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