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[Commlist] CFP - IASPM-US 2020 Conference: “BPM: Bodies, Places, Movements”
Thu Aug 22 08:43:50 GMT 2019
CFP
IASPM-US 2020 Conference: “BPM: Bodies, Places, Movements”
May 21-23, 2020
Ann Arbor, Michigan
The International Association for the Study of Popular Music-United
States chapter (IASPM-US) invites proposals for its annual conference,
which will take place in Ann Arbor at the University of Michigan on May
21-23, 2020. We welcome abstracts on all aspects of popular music,
broadly defined, from any discipline or profession, and especially
encourage submissions on the many rich popular music histories of
Michigan, Ann Arbor, and Detroit.
The theme for this year’s conference is “BPM: Bodies, Places,
Movements,” which intersects with Detroit and its storied place in
rhythm and blues, rock, punk, pop, hip-hop, and electronic dance music,
and is intended to connect the histories, philosophies, and practices of
urban spaces to other historical and global popular music communities.
Each year Detroit celebrates this local-meets-global history with the
Movement Electronic Music Festival, which in 2020 will commence the same
weekend as the IASPM-US conference.
BPM as a marker for “Beats Per Minute” was first included on records to
allow DJs to sync disco and funk selections together on the fly and has
since become an important digital tool to create, alter and interweave
tracks. In addition to its practical musical applications, the creation
of BPM encodes an array of social and cultural histories: urban
migration; industrialization and its reverberations in
deindustrialization and urban renewal; the cultural, racial, and class
politics of white flight, capital departure, and gentrification; social
movements from the Second Great Awakening, Civil Rights, and Fair
Housing through neo-conservatism, white nationalism, and millennial
populism; and the myriad communities that articulate their ideals,
utopias, frustrations and joys through popular music and its attendant
practices, in garages, studios, music halls, warehouses, and digital
spaces. Topics to consider include (but are not limited to):
• Bodies: identities, abilities, practices, performances, communities,
bodies of work, raced, classed, gendered, and sexualized bodies, modes
of embodiment
• Places: Cities, suburbs, small towns, virtual and digital spaces,
stages, studios, basements, exclusive and inclusive spaces
• Movements: social, cultural, and political movements, mobilities,
dance, migration, displacement
IASPM-US is a multidisciplinary organization, and invites proposals from
and across all fields of scholarly inquiry. Conference proposals from
intellectuals from outside of academia, including teachers, museum and
archive professionals, musicians and music professionals, and
independent scholars, are encouraged. IASPM-US is also a friendly
conference for students at all levels. We especially welcome proposals
from members of underrepresented groups including, but not limited to,
women, Black/African American, Indigenous, and People of Color, people
with disabilities, and people from LGBTQ+ communities, as well as people
of different ages, socio/economic classes, nationalities, and religions.
This year’s program committee consists of Justin Patch (chair), Anthony
Kwame Harrison, K. E. Goldschmitt, Brian F. Wright, Rebekah Farrugia,
and Kathryn Metz.
Please submit proposals via Word document to (iaspmus2020 /at/ gmail.com) with
“last name, first name” in the subject line no later than midnight
October 1, 2019. Individual submissions should include a paper title,
the presenter’s name, contact information and a 250-word abstract that
identifies the methodology used, states the paper’s goals, summarizes
the context and argument of the paper, and includes a brief conclusion.
Organized panels, consisting of 3 - 4 papers, should include a 250-word
description of the panel’s rationale and goals, and a 250-word abstract
for each individual participating in the panel. Roundtables, consisting
of a moderated conversation with 4 – 6 participants, require a single
250 word abstract and a list of roundtable members, and should designate
one person as the panel chair. All individual presentations are limited
to 20 minutes with a 10-minute question and answer period. Roundtables
and organized panels can be allotted up to a two-hour time slot.
Abstracts not adhering to the word count will not be considered.
Please note: All conference presenters must be registered IASPM members
(or must register after paper, panel, or roundtable acceptance). For
membership and conference information visit: http://iaspm-us.net/
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