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[Commlist] Call for Papers: Global Hip-Hop Studies (Special Issue: ‘Breaking and the Olympics’)
Fri Feb 19 14:42:00 GMT 2021
*Call for Papers: Global Hip-Hop Studies*
Special Issue: ‘Breaking and the Olympics’
To be considered for this Special Issue, please submit the following via
this Google Form
<https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSehkzSJ8uk6QtTt-yjlB6CTkHoB4uHT5fNRcDNIu9sykbnETA/viewform>by
*31 May 2021*:
• an abstract of 150–250 words (plus references, if necessary)
• author name(s)
• institutional affiliation(s)
• contact details a brief bio of no more than 150 words (which includes
the author’s positionalities in relation to their topic).
Global Hip Hop Studies (GHHS) is a peer-reviewed, rigorous and
community-responsive academic journal that publishes research on
contemporary as well as historical issues and debates surrounding hip
hop music and culture around the world.
The recent announcement of breaking in the 2024 Paris Olympics has
stirred a substantial response from within and outside of hip hop
culture. This special issue of GHHS is positioned to not only explore
contemporary debates about breaking in the Olympics, but also to develop
critical discourse that can offer insight to practitioners, cultural
organizations and the IOC. We are especially interested in research
projects that engage in local, regional and national perspectives and
can provide useful resources transnationally for those involved in this
milestone cultural moment. To this end, the issue will be published a
year in advance of the 2024 Olympics in 2023.
Breaking’s introduction into the 2018 Buenos Aires Youth Olympic games
roused similar debate within breaking communities across the globe,
prompting concerns regarding the dance’s misrepresentation and possible
exploitation. New tensions between breaking veterans, activists, the
general public and corporate interests have emerged already in the lead
up to 2024. Despite this, many veterans and community leaders who are
responsible for breaking’s introduction into the Olympics also believe
the dance has much to gain from its formal elevation and subsequent
mainstream rediscovery. This Special Issue will critically assess the
potential benefits and dangers for breaking communities worldwide and
shed light on the various competing interests vying to authenticate
and/or leverage breaking’s new global attention. This is also a good
moment to reflect back on the relationship between breaking and the
Olympics, starting with the 1984 breaking performances at the closing
ceremony in Los Angeles, and the rise of international competitions with
events such as Redbull BC One, Battle of The Year, R16, World Bboy
Series, Notorious IBE, Silverback Open Championships, Freestyle Session
and Outbreak Europe.
We encourage all researchers to think critically about how to include
voices from hip hop communities – making practice-led research desirable
– and, where possible or necessary, to embark on projects with
interdisciplinary teams. This Special Issue also has an extended
research term (2021–22) to provide sufficient time for those who would
like to pursue funding for their projects.
Disciplinary focus may include, but not be limited to hip hop studies,
dance studies, sport sciences, communication studies, cultural studies,
popular music studies, anthropology, sociology and psychology.
*Submissions may consider, but are not limited to, any of the following
topics: *
• Olympics and cultural policy and economies
• racial politics, representation and identity
• gender and sexuality equity
• health and fitness: optimization, injury prevention and training
• music economy: commissioned works versus licensing, role of the DJ
• civic identity, engagement and nation-building
• critical perspectives on the Olympics, its political history and
city-making
• issues about performance enhancing drugs/illicit drugs
• evaluation and judging (e.g. the Trivium judging criteria)
• shifts within the aesthetic of breaking and hip hop culture
• the politics of breaking as a sport and as art
• public/mainstream vs. community framing and reception
• corporate interests and commercialization
• sustainability: sociocultural and economic displacement, managing
Olympic participation during pandemics
• infrastructure: venues, housing.
Article Types:
• Articles (6,000–8,000 words maximum not including bibliography)
• Artist, Judge and DJ statements, and interviews (3,000–5,000 words)
• Book Reviews (1,000–2,000 words)
• Media Reviews (1,000–2,000 words)
• ‘Dive-in-the-Archive’ (archival pieces) (1,000–4,000 words)
• ‘Show and Prove’ (high-res image for cover and 400–2,000 word text)
For more information, please visit GHHS’s webpage
<https://www.intellectbooks.com/global-hip-hop-studies>.
If your abstract is accepted, we expect to receive the full article or
statement uploaded via the usual online submission portal by *31 May 2022*.
To download the full CFP, click here >>
https://www.intellectbooks.com/asset/55994/1/Global_Hip_Hop_Studies_Call_for_Papers_Feb_21.pdf
<https://www.intellectbooks.com/asset/55994/1/Global_Hip_Hop_Studies_Call_for_Papers_Feb_21.pdf>
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