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[ecrea] CfP: elements - 2nd Meeting of the European HipHop Studies Network
Sun Oct 28 07:36:32 GMT 2018
CfP: ELEMENTS BRISTOL*
6-8 June 2019
2nd Meeting of the European HipHop Studies Network
University of Bristol, UK
*Call for Papers*
Emceeing. DJing. Breaking. Graffiti. Hip-hop is commonly understood to
consist of these four elements. The idea of four elements is one of
hip-hop culture’s core narrative and most pervasive founding myth since
its beginnings in the Bronx in the 1970s. Yet, the idea of four core
elements has been highly contested since the beginning of the culture as
there is no unified definition of how many elements exist, who defined
them, and how they came together. For instance, hip-hop founding father
Kool Herc believes that "that there are far more than those [four
elements]: the way you walk, the way you talk, the way you look, the way
you communicate." (Chang xi) Likewise, on his album Kristyles, KRS ONE
introduces his theory of nine elements which include beatboxing,
fashion, knowledge, and entrepreneurialism (“Nine Elements”).
On the other hand, researchers such as criminologist Jeffrey Ross also
emphasize that “graffiti [...] was established long before hip-hop music
emerged in the South Bronx, and many of its practitioners do not
identify with the music or its subculture at all” (139). While their
number is contested, hip-hop’s elements are crucial in understanding the
logics, conventions, and values of this fascinating culture in the US
and in Europe. They reveal its creative tensions as well as larger
notions of authority, authorship, boundary formation, community as well
as inclusion and exclusion.
The second meeting of the European HipHop Studies Network therefore
explores one of hip-hop’s most central ideas, the ideas of elements: Who
defines them? What do they tell us about cultural, social, and economic
communities and boundaries across Europe? How do these limits vary
according to various contexts and practices across Europe? What are
their consequences for cultural production and consumption? The
objective of the meeting is to trace, interrogate, and expand the notion
of elements as central organizing principles in hip-hop culture and
their variations across Europe.
We invite papers, panels, performances, and contributions from a wide
variety of backgrounds, perspectives, and angles. Scholarly disciplines
include but are not limited to art history, cultural studies, black
studies, ethnography, geography, graffiti studies, literary studies,
musicology, pedagogy, performance studies, philosophy, political
science, sociology, and visual culture studies. Artistic contributions
include performances, themed panels of any format, lecture-recitals, and
philosophies which combine research and praxis (or practice-as-research).
Artistic and scholarly proposals engaging with European hip-hop’s
elements (those based both in Europe and outside of it) should include a
title, 250 word abstract of their contribution and short biographical
sketch. This should be submitted to (hiphopnetworkeurope /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(hiphopnetworkeurope /at/ gmail.com)> no later than31 January 2019. We
especially welcome papers that engage with less-academically-visible
work, and from artists and practitioners from a wider variety of
backgrounds. We hope to see you in Bristol!
*About the Network
*
The European HipHop Studies Network was founded in Dortmund in March
2018. It aims at fostering exchange and cooperation between artists,
practitioners, scholars, educators, policy makers, and the wider public
in, across, and on Europe. The network is dedicated to promoting
research on hip-hop culture(s) in, on, and about Europe and to creating
respect for it in its respective communities as well as among cultural
and political authorities. Based on hip-hop’s principles of respect,
openness, and mutual understanding, the network’s idea of “Europe”
refers to the continent and its people including its transnational and
postcolonial histories and trajectories. It is inclusive in terms of
race, ethnicity, gender, class, sexuality, age, geographical origin, and
ability.
*Network Organizing Committee:*
Séverin Guillard (University Paris Est Créteil)
Sergey Ivanov (aka Grand PaP) (DA EXIT NGO)
James McNally (University of Bristol)
Sina Nitzsche (Ruhr University Bochum/TU Dortmund University)
J. Griffith Rollefson (University College Cork)
Venla Sykäri (University of Helsinki)
Justin Williams (University of Bristol)
*Contact:*
Justin Williams:(justin.williams /at/ bristol.ac.uk)
<mailto:(justin.williams /at/ bristol.ac.uk)>
Network Website:
https://europeanhiphopstudiesnetwork.wordpress.com/
Network Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/europeanhiphopstudiesnetwork/
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