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[ecrea] CFP: Mediating Cultural Work: Texts, Objects and Politics
Tue Mar 07 15:53:13 GMT 2017
I am delighted to inform you of the dates and CFP for CAMEo, Research
Institute for Cultural and Media Economies, first conference:
**
*CFP: Mediating Cultural Work: Texts, Objects and Politics*
Conference of the CAMEo Research Institute for Cultural and Media Economies
**
*6-8 September 2017, Stamford Court, University of Leicester, UK*
*Keynote Speakers:*
·*Angela McRobbie (Goldsmiths) *author of ‘Be Creative’
·*Jack Linchuan Qiu (Chinese University of Hong Kong) *author of
‘Goodbye iSlave’
·*John Beck (Westminster) & Matthew Cornford (Brighton)*co-authors of
‘The Art School and the Culture Shed’
Others confirmed to date: */Mark Banks, Eleonora Belfiore, Bridget
Conor, Doris Ruth Eikhof, Chris Land, Jo Littler, Kate Oakley, Dave
O’Brien, Martin Parker, Keith Randle, Anamik Saha, Jennifer Smith
Maguire, Claire Squires, Helen Wood, David Wright./*
The expansion of *cultural work *– understood as activities of
production in the creative and cultural industries, media and the arts –
has been accompanied by a plethora of *texts, discourses and
representations* about such work, as well as a whole range of policy
narratives, descriptions and manifestos designed to specify and define
the goods and qualities such work provides. Yet more critical accounts
have also emerged to challenge the ways in which cultural and media work
is mediated, as well as *organised, managed and experienced* –
subverting common-sense understandings and more upbeat and hegemonic
narratives.
At the same time, *new platforms and technologies of production* are
shaping the ways in which cultural work is undertaken (and understood)
as a meaningful social practice, while the cultural industries
themselves continue to produce *expressive objects, goods and
commodities* that manifest and mediate the labour that has gone into
their production, suggesting ways of consuming or engaging with them as
‘crafted’ objects or as symbolic forms.
This interdisciplinary conference therefore focuses on how *cultural
work and production is mediated* - in terms of text, image, discourse,
narrative, policy, curriculum, ideology and fantasy, as well as through
technology, materially, and in objective form. We are especially
interested to discuss the *politics of mediation* – and to outline
progressive challenges to an ‘expressive’ and ‘creative’ work that
continues to be blighted by *social exclusivity, inequality and injustice.*
*_We invite submissions of individual papers or panels (of up to four
papers)_**from across the social sciences, arts and humanities, and from
industry practitioners, that relate to any of the following themes:*
* *Policies and Programmes:*what ‘official’ technologies, texts and
discourses are currently used to define and describe work and
working lives in the cultural, creative and media industries; what
logics, rationalities, data, ideologies and imaginaries are in
evidence? What knowledges or truths might they affirm or reject? How
do such policies travel, translate or reproduce?
* *Texts and Representations:*how is cultural, creative and media work
represented in popular media such as film, television, art or music
– or in the texts, programmes and practices of management and
organisations, or in systems of training and education? What
possibilities are enabled or constrained by popular and professional
discourses on the cultural industries? What links the symbolic and
the economic in such cases?
* *Objects and Practices:*how are cultural industry objects and goods
constructed, negotiated, and legitimated by mediating institutions
and individuals? How do specific industries (such as craft, design,
fashion, food and drink, TV, music, journalism, publishing) generate
working practices that help mediate new social relations of cultural
production and consumption? What visibilities and invisibilities are
occasioned by a focus (or fetish) on the cultural or crafted object?
* *Agency and Action:*how are struggles to define and deliver a more
equal, equitable and just cultural and media workplace taking shape,
in discourse and action? What structures, entities or agencies are
helping to mediate, shape or enact a progressive (or reactionary)
politics of cultural and media work?
Please submit abstracts for papers or panels to by *Wednesday 3rd May
2017* – for details of how to submit go to www.le.ac.uk/cameo2017
<http://www.le.ac.uk/cameo2017> Please email all submissions to
(cameoconference2017 /at/ leicester.ac.uk)
<mailto:(cameoconference2017 /at/ leicester.ac.uk)?subject=cameo%20conference%202017>
**
*Decision on submissions:*Mid-May
*Conference fee: *£185 (£100 for students) includes all lunches, evening
meals and refreshments.
Registration and Accommodation Options available from 19th May
Informal enquiries and further details (cameo /at/ leicester.ac.uk)
<mailto:(cameo /at/ leicester.ac.uk)?subject=cameo%20conference>
Dr Stevie Marsden
Research Associate
CAMEo Research Institute on Cultural and Media Economies &
School of Media, Communication & Sociology
University of Leicester, UK
LE1 7QA
http://www2.le.ac.uk/institutes/cameo
541aa3ae-22f4-4ed9-bfd4-35cb8d8633b6@CAMEO_UoL
<https://twitter.com/CAMEo_UoL>
e943ecc8-5be2-4768-a17e-1b829b908afeCAMEo Research Institute
<https://www.facebook.com/culturalandmediaeconomies/>
Tel: (0116) 229 7163
@StevieLMarsden <https://twitter.com/StevieLMarsden>
Currently reading: /Scratch: Writers, Money, and the Art of Making a
Living
<http://www.simonandschuster.co.uk/books/Scratch/Manjula-Martin/9781501134579>
/by Manjula Martin
**
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