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[ecrea] Call for Chapter Proposals: Mixing Pop and Politics
Tue Jun 19 22:05:07 GMT 2018
Mixing Pop and Politics: Call for Chapter Proposals
Editors:
Catherine Hoad (Massey University, Wellington)
Geoff Stahl (Victoria University, Wellington)
Oli Wilson (Massey University, Wellington)
Overview:
History provides us with ample instances of the power of popular music
to speak to, through, and against various political moments. The
contemporary socio-political situation of the late-2010s also offers
countless opportunities to explore how popular music revisits,
reconstitutes, rewrites and reconciles itself to this past. This current
context necessitates an awareness of the complex position of popular
music, and the new directions it must negotiate, as music responds to
the shifting paradigms of power in which we currently find ourselves.
This collection aims to explore the complex politics of resistance,
subversion, containment and reconciliation in popular music in both
contemporary and historic formations. Following the IASPM-ANZ 2017
conference on this theme, and building on earlier scholarship mapping
popular music’s entanglement with politics (Frith 1983; Bennett, Frith
and Grossberg 2005; Cloonan and Garafolo 2009), here we ask what it
means to mix popular music with the political in the current
socio-political paradigm. How has popular music responded to, resisted,
or been represented within the resurgence of far-right politics? What is
the role of popular music in responding to climate change and
environmental degradation? In what ways can the use, misuse and abuse of
musical technology be framed as political? What role has popular music
played, both historically and contemporaneously, in contributing to the
fluid renegotiation of gendered and sexual identities? How is popular
music situated within the context of online activism, as international
communicative flows target police brutality, state corruption, and
sexual harassment? Here we seek to explore popular music’s political
implications, and the nuances with which these impact upon constructions
of identity, community and practice in distinct locations and
ideological epochs.
We invite chapter proposals that can be situated within the following
broad areas. We emphasise the value of diverse contributions, in
pointing to pop’s entanglements with politics beyond Western centres,
and the regional nuances of this relationship therein. We will consider
chapter proposals which touch on, but are not restricted to, the
following areas:
Affect and Embodiment:
• I Will Survive: The Politics of Pleasure and Popular Music
• We Are the Robots: Resistant, Reconciled, Reconstituted, Recombinant
Bodies in Popular Music
• If You’re Feeling Sinister: Affect, Emotion and the Subversive Power
of Popular Music
Technology:
• This Machine Kills Fascists: Technologies, Politics and Popular Music
• A Whisper to a Scream: Silence, Distortion, Amplification and the
Politics of Sound
• The Revolution Will Not Be Televised: Popular Music on Screen(s)
Histories, Identities, and Spaces:
• Playing With a Different Sex: Otherness and Othering in Popular Music
• Here’s Where The Story Ends: Alternate Histories of Popular Music
• What’s My Scene: Communality in Online Spaces and Local Scenes
Protest:
• You Don’t Own Me: Cultivating, Codifying and Commodifying Resistance
• You've Got the Power: Populism, Authoritarianism, Conservatism and
Popular Music
• (We’re) Stranded: Political Legacies of Punk and Post-Punk
Please submit chapter proposals of 300 words (plus references, if
necessary) along with author name(s), institutional affiliations, and
contact details and a brief bio of no more than 150 words by September
1st to: (mixingpopandpoliticsbook /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(mixingpopandpoliticsbook /at/ gmail.com)>
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