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[ecrea] cfp: Heroism as a Global Phenomenon in Popular Culture
Tue Jul 12 06:02:43 GMT 2016
Collaborative Research Centre 948: Heroes—Heroizations—Heroisms
www.sfb948.uni-freiburg.de/?page=1
<http://www.sfb948.uni-freiburg.de/?page=1>
*Call for Papers:*
*International Conference "Heroism as a Global Phenomenon in Popular
Culture"
Freiburg, Germany, September 28-30 2017*
Organized by Michael Butter (Tübingen), Nicole Falkenhayner, Wolfgang
Hochbruck, Barbara Korte (Freiburg) and Simon Wendt (Frankfurt a. M.)
In an age of globalization and transnationalism, heroes transcend their
cultural spheres of origin and are re-rooted, adapted and translated in
new local contexts across the world. We understand (male and female)
heroes as a phenomenon of exceptionality that has a positive
significance in relation to the values, ideals and norms of the
communities in which these figures are admired, followed, functionalized
but also debated. In this process of “glocalization,” popular culture,
with its world-wide markets and media, is a driving force. Such
different media as films, comics, graphic novels, computer games, or
internet blogs construct and disseminate narratives about heroes and
heroisms across the globe and are consumed in the Global North as well
as the Global South. At the same time, there are centres of
dissemination – including Hollywood, Bollywood, or Hongkong – that
continue to dominate processes of production and dissemination of hero
narratives.
This multidisciplinary conference aims to highlight the complex and
interrelated processes of creation, marketing, consumption, and impact,
of globalized hero narratives, as well as the numerous cultural flows of
exchange that have made them possible since the end of World War II. We
are interested in contributions (case studies) which conceive of heroism
as a transcultural and transnational phenomenon that may originate in
one particular nation but ultimately transcends borders. Questions to be
discussed would include how the meanings of heroic figures and
narratives are changed in cultural translation, or what specific
processes are active in the world-wide exchange of figures and concepts
of the heroic. Case studies can focus on situations in Europe, North
America, Africa and Asia.
Possible topics include, but are not limited to:
- culturally different notions of the heroic that come into contact when
hero narratives cross borders and function globally
- superhero movies and the role that global markets play in the ways in
which they are designed and narrated
- the ways in which hero narratives from one nation (e.g. the United
States) are adopted and adapted in other nations or regions (e.g.
Japan/Asia) and vice versa
- the processes of exchange between the fictional and the factual in
relation to the heroic (e.g. the adoption of the /Hunger Games/ gesture
by political protesters in Thailand)
Please submit abstracts of c. 200 words and a short CV to the organizers
via *(sekretariat.korte /at/ anglistik.uni-freiburg.de)
<mailto:(sekretariat.korte /at/ anglistik.uni-freiburg.de)>* by *December 31,
2016*.
Selected speakers will be reimbursed for the travel and accommodation costs.
--
Dr. Nicole Falkenhayner
Projektleiterin DFG FA 1253/1-1 "CCTV Beyond Surveillance"
Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg
Englisches Seminar
Rempartstr. 15
79085 Freiburg (Germany)
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