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[ecrea] Call for Papers: The Power of Hip Hop
Fri Apr 29 18:57:48 GMT 2016
CALL FOR PAPERS: THE POWER OF HIP HOP
A one-day seminar on the role of hip hop in affecting positive social change
Papers from academics, practitioners and postgraduate students encouraged
TYPE: Seminar
DATE: Friday 8th July 2016
LOCATION: Rich Mix Cultural Foundation, London, UK
SUBJECT FIELDS: Contemporary History, Humanities, Politics, African
American History, International Development, Contemporary & Popular Music
ORGANISATION WEBSITE: www.inplaceofwar.net <http://www.inplaceofwar.net>
PROGRAMME WEBSITE: www.inplaceofwar.wix.com/london2016
<http://www.inplaceofwar.wix.com/london2016>
HOW TO APPLY
Abstracts of 200 words for 20-minute individual paper presentations, 10
minute short papers/provocations or 60-minute round table discussions on
targeted issues or topics are welcome.
For queries and submissions contact: (ines /at/ inplaceofwar.net)
<mailto:(ines /at/ inplaceofwar.net)> / 07448 711 17
DEADLINE: 9AM, MONDAY 16TH MAY, 2016
In Place of War are seeking speakers and participants wishing to explore
hip hop as a site of identity construction, activism, education and
community formation. This is a multidisciplinary field and we’re seeking
artists, academics, activists and postgraduate students with an interest
in hip hop as a tool for bringing about small and large scale social change.
This event is funded by the Arts & Humanities Research Council, and has
been developed in partnership with The Guardian, and forms part of a
wider programme of events called Culture.Conflict.Change. The Power of
Hip Hop academic seminar will precede a day of public talks and
performances featuring international and UK artists, activists and
entrepreneurs sharing how they have used hip hop as a tool for social
change.
"Fight between my conscience and the skin that’s on my body / Man I need
to fight the power but I need that new Ferrari"
In Vince Staples’ 2016 track ‘Lift Me Up’, he grapples with the double
headed power of hip hop - acknowledging at once the empowerment and
social mobility possible with celebrity and success; but also the
importance of hip hop as a site of resistance and identity. Staples’
words also speak to hip hop as a force of economic mobility, albeit one
that carries within it a trace of guilt at having escaped a level of
deprivation still extremely commonplace in the 21st century.
These lyrics suggest a burden of choice upon the practitioners of hip
hop. Why should these options – to enjoy success or to express oneself –
be mutually exclusive? Does hip hop offer an opportunity for social
mobility that also allows the marginalised to be heard? Or is it,
rather, being degraded and subsumed by the cultural mainstream as
another impossible, aspirational ideal that plays into the hands of the
few at the top, whilst giving those at the bottom just enough to hope to
maintain the status quo?
Or does this binary of money and ideology overly simplify the
discipline? Is the power of hip hop greater and broader still? Despite
a conflation with worlds of consumerism and violence, hip hop is a site
of learning, rehabilitation and expression for communities all over the
world. Hip hop is offering alternative lives to gang members in
Colombia, providing education in Venezuela, fighting for freedom of
speech in Zimbabwe, raising political awareness in Senegal, and
mobilising protestors in Egypt.
There is perhaps a contradiction within hip hop – a tool for
self-determination and self-expression for a global subaltern, but also
the vehicle and playground of the super-rich and famous. And yet to deny
hip hop either of these roles might be to strip it of its unique role as
a social leveller that has spread itself globally and across the social
spectrum to move from a subculture to one of the most widely consumed
forms of entertainment and art in the world.
The power of hip hop is also, of course, in its aesthetic merit - a
mastery of language and physicality; an exercise in the relative
textures of individual, collaborative and competitive art forms; a shock
of colour, sound and beauty often out of a backdrop or deprivation and
conflict. It is these sites of power that we look here to explore.
We welcome papers exploring, but not limited to, the following themes:
· Hip Hop as a social leveller
· The subjective perspectives of hip hop culture
· The relationship between hip hop and religion
· Hip Hop and its economic models
· The role of Hip Hop across London’s diverse populations
· Immigrant identities and hip hop
· The role of hip hop in mainstream and alternative education
· The characteristics of hip hop as a tool for social activism
· Models of hip hop consumption: Grassroots vs. commercial
· Hip Hop and entrepreneurialism
This event provides delegates the opportunity to showcase their work and
network with other academics and practitioners operating within the
field. We actively encourage inter-disciplinary discussion and learning
and seek to promote this through all of the work that we do. All talks
and presentations will be made available digitally via the In Place of
War YouTube channel, with promotion by national partners. An e-journal
will also be published featuring all presentations.
ABOUT IN PLACE OF WAR
In Place of War is a multi-award winning organisation based within The
University of Manchester. We support artists and creative communities
living in sites of war, conflict and humanitarian disaster to build
powerful networks, create social change through creativity and
demonstrate the value of the arts to public space, public life and
public debate. In Place of War started in 2004 as an AHRC-funded
research project on the relationship between performance and war. It has
since received four different AHRC grants and one from the Leverhulme
trust. It was awarded a THES Excellence and Innovation in the Arts award
in 2010 and has featured in local, national and international media. In
Place of War was also a finalist in the 2015 Guardian Higher Education
Awards.
Today our work is spread across five core areas: research, education,
digital networks and creative spaces, and artistic production. Our team
is headed by Founder & Co-Director Professor James Thompson, and
Co-Director Ruth Daniel.
--
<https://www.inplaceofwar.net/>
<https://www.facebook.com/inplaceofwar><https://www.twitter.com/inplaceofwar>
*Iné**s** Soria-Donlan
*Director of Production & Festivals
In Place of War
*
E: *(ines /at/ inplaceofwar.net) <mailto:(ines /at/ inplaceofwar.net)>
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