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[Commlist] conference genre/nostalgia 2021
Thu Dec 17 15:48:36 GMT 2020
*Reminder: registration is now open for genre/nostalgia 2021*
*An online film and television studies conference, University of
Hertfordshire, January 5&6 2021*
**
*A full conference schedule and registration details can be found here
<https://www.herts.ac.uk/research/groups-and-units/media-research-group/genrenostalgia-2021>***
Registration is free but places are limited. Much of the conference will
be recorded and available after the event.
Please address queries to the event organisers: Dr Shellie McMurdo
<mailto:(s.mcmurdo2 /at/ herts.ac.uk)>, Dr Laura Mee
<mailto:(l.mee2 /at/ herts.ac.uk)>, Dr Caitlin Shaw <mailto:(c.shaw3 /at/ herts.ac.uk)>
**
*Keynote speaker: Dr Kate Egan, Northumbria University: ‘Nostalgia for
pre-digital scares: childhood memories, horror and 35mm'*
**
Film and TV genres and nostalgia have long been intertwined.
Fundamentally, both are rooted in the practice of creatively recycling
and adapting modes of the past; Steve Neale’s (1990) assertion that
genres are processes of repetition and variation is also applicable to
many films and programmes which reimagine historical events, past eras,
earlier styles and classic works of literature. Period dramas regularly
cite the codes and conventions of past genres as a means of triggering
collective memories of an era, while for multiple other film and TV
genres, the past is a key component: for instance, science fiction might
depict the past as a function of time travel, while the Western is
founded on its 19^th century American frontier setting, and gothic
horror is often associated with Victorian England or based on fin de
siècle literature.
Relationships between genre and nostalgia are regularly explored in
isolated studies, while broader publications and events often focus on
one or the other. However, the focus is rarely on the relationship and
interaction between them. This may in part be due to lingering doubts on
the value of exploring it. When, in 1991, Fredric Jameson identified
what he called ‘the nostalgia film’, he cited genre texts like the
neo-noir /Chinatown /(Roman Polanski, 1974) as evidence of ‘the waning
of our historicity’ (1991: 21). In their repetition of previously
mediated images, it was, to a large extent, the /genericity /of films
like these which so concerned Jameson and led him to judge them as
lacking in historically critical depth. This perspective has to some
extent persisted in studies of period and historical dramas, where
engagements with the past in popular genres like horror, comedy and
science fiction are considered less ‘serious’ or historically
significant. Meanwhile, Jameson’s reading of postmodern nostalgia as
inherently regressive, despite being subsequently questioned (see, for
instance, Hutcheon 2000; Dika 2003), has encouraged some studies to look
sceptically on the presence of nostalgia, reading it as a more or less
straightforward indicator of longing for a simplified, comforting past
rather than as a complex phenomenon.
Yet, links between genre and nostalgia have only deepened in the
increasingly media-saturated 21^st century. More genre films and
programmes have opted for past settings, and more period dramas, in
their style of historical adaptation, have rejected traditional notions
of ‘authenticity’ in favour of self-reflexive genericity. As such, this
one-day symposium, which we hope will lead to the development of an
active research network, seeks to explore connections between film and
television genres and nostalgia, memory and other manifestations of the
past. The aim is to facilitate dialogue between these two rich and
increasingly interconnected areas of study, and to connect scholars at
all levels working in these areas.
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