[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[ecrea] IASPM Canada 2017 CFP
Mon Sep 26 20:03:42 GMT 2016
*“A Place in This World”: Music and Belonging / Canada 150*
IASPM-Canada Annual Conference
University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada
May 25-27, 2017
Deadline for abstracts: November 30, 2016
In a queer dance club, a Black Lives Matter or Idle No More protest, at
the Tragically Hip’s “farewell” concert this past August, in the context
of Canadian confederation or elsewhere, music is a powerful means
through which participants can enact a sense of belonging. Of course, as
demonstrated by Brexit, the Syrian refugee crisis, celebrations of
Canada’s 150th birthday (branded as “Canada 150”), and activism on
behalf of murdered and missing indigenous women, any enactment of
belonging also carries with it a series of struggles over who is
included and excluded, over whose voice and experiences matter. Music is
integral to these processes of inclusion and exclusion.
2017 marks the 150th year of confederation in Canada and thus the theme
“Music and Belonging” is particularly resonant. While we do not wish to
limit the scope of
the conference to issues related to this anniversary, it does seem
timely to trouble and interrogate themes of national identity and
belonging. The very constitution of Canada is predicated on important
debates of belonging where music was often the central aesthetic form
(for example Jean-Baptiste Labelle’s 1868 /Cantate: La Confédération/
celebrated the union, while folksongs like “The Anti-Confederation
Song,” from 1869, articulated some of the anxieties around forming a
nation). More recently, music in Canada has provided a powerful means
through which participants can enact a sense of belonging, whether to an
affinity group, a political movement, or a nation.
Our theme encourages participants to explore questions of musical
belonging in a wide range of contexts. How does music shape national
belonging, particularly in Canada, a settler colonial nation with
complex racial and language politics, as well as a music industry shaped
by multinational forces? How does music shape communities and
counterpublics on dance floors, concert venues, and parade routes? How
do archives and methods shape our sense of what music matters? How does
musical performance and policy draw boundaries around the human and
between people?
Our questioning of music and belonging resonates with what it means to
carry out music scholarship in Canada in the context of a joint meeting
between the International Association for the Study of Popular Music -
Canada Chapter (IASPM), the Canadian Society for Traditional Music
(CSTM), the Canadian University Music Society (MusCan) and the Canadian
Association of Music Librarians, Archives and Documentation Centers
(CAML), May 25-27 at the University of Toronto. Each organization will
develop its own program, but we will come together for some panels and
plenaries to ask questions around the central theme of belonging. We are
also collaborating with the North American chapter of PoP Moves
("Performances of the Popular”), an international research group that
focuses on popular dance, and so we encourage papers exploring the
relationship between music, dance and belonging in popular culture.
We encourage questions of musical methods and methodologies as they
relate to the themes of belonging, and research approaches working
across diverse practices of ethnography, archival studies, textual
analysis, and other types of analysis and critical investigation. Also,
with Black Lives Matter Toronto and Toronto Pride as recent events
encouraging debates over belonging and activism, we encourage papers
that relate academic work to public spaces and engagement with diverse
communities.
As this is our annual conference for IASPM-Canada, we also encourage
proposals of any popular music topic, and we hope to include the widest
array of scholarship in the field as possible.
Possible paper and panel topics might include:
* /Sounds of belonging/
* /Legal contexts: copyright, CanCon, communal ownership, and the
courts/
* /Music recording, production and cultural history/
* /Popular music and dance: bodies on the dance floor /
* /Fandom and musical communities/
* /Politics of gender, ethnicity, and nationality (including “The
Great White North”) /
* /Live music! Dance and music in venues, festivals, local and
transnational scenes/
* /Music and 'silence': the absence of music or types of music, or
various exclusions of marginalized voices/
* /Materiality, value and belonging: museums, archives, collections/
Abstracts of individual papers, workshops, performances and other
presentations should be no longer than 300 words. Panel submissions
should include a title and abstract for the panel (300 word max.) as
well as titles and abstracts for the individual papers on the panel. All
abstracts for a panel should be submitted together. Abstracts will be
adjudicated individually so it is possible for a panel to be accepted
but not an individual paper.
Each abstract should also include a short biography of the author (100
words max.) including the institutional affiliation and email address of
each author. Each abstract should also include five keywords.
Submissions in French and English are acceptable. All submissions must
be submitted as a single Word document with the author's last name as
the document file name. Do not submit your proposal as a PDF File.
Proposals will be blind reviewed. The program committee consists of:
Mary Fogarty (Chair)
Christina Baade
Kate Galloway
Eric Hung
Maria Murphy
Mei-Ra St-Laurent
Papers will be limited to 20 minutes followed by 10 minutes of
questions. Other presentations will be limited to 60 minutes. All
participants must be members of IASPM-Canada. Membership information is
available on the following website: http://iaspm-ca/membership.
For questions about the conference, contact program chair, Mary Fogarty
(maryf (at) yorku.ca <http://yorku.ca>), or local organizing chair,
Robin Elliott (robin (dot) elliott (at) utoronto.ca <http://utoronto.ca>).
Submission deadline: November 30th 2016
Send submissions to: iaspmcanada2017 (at) gmail.com <http://gmail.com>
Susan Fast
Professor, Department of English & Cultural Studies
Director, Graduate Program in Gender Studies & Feminist Research
McMaster University
1280 Main St. W
Hamilton, Ontario L8S 4M2
President, International Association for the Study of Popular Music,
Canadian Branch, 2016-19
www.iaspm.ca <http://www.iaspm.ca>
---------------
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]