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[Commlist] CFP: special issue on Courtney Love and Hole
Wed Jun 14 19:07:51 GMT 2023
*Special Issue of /Rock Music Studies/: Courtney Love and Hole*
*
*
Editors: Debra Ferreday and Rhianon Jones
In celebration of the 30th anniversary of Hole’s epoch-defining album
/Live Through This/, /Rock Music Studies/invites article proposals for a
special edition that examines the cultural legacy of Courtney Love and Hole.
For the editors, this project emerged from a shared appreciation for the
work and star persona of Courtney Love. Love has always occupied a
complex position in popular culture: a key figure of the 1990s, she is
continually shattering and disrupting the misogynistic narratives
imposed upon her; if she has received – or personally courted – any kind
of attention, it is usually the wrong kind. As a star figure who emerged
from the alternative music scene in the 1990s, she became the target of
misogyny from the music press, from her husband’s fans and, in fact,
from some feminists. As a musician, she dissociates herself from overtly
politicized forms of cultural production, preferring to appropriate and
disrupt the figure of the (white, male) rock star. Since the ’90s, she
has emerged as a complex figure: fashion muse, feminist, early Weinstein
whistleblower, guardian of cultural memory, and a sometimes shrewd,
sometimes naïve early adopter of social media.
Yet she is irreducible to any of these labels, a disruptor who
constantly shatters all attempts to contain and make sense of her. As
such, she speaks to the multiple ways that the ‘90s, far from being
constrained to the past, haunt and resonate in contemporary culture. By
thinking with Courtney, we can shed light on key questions of gender,
race, power, violence, and self-making that are not relegated to the
past but haunt contemporary figurings of voice, embodiment, performance,
and celebrity. Love’s ongoing struggle to have a voice, and the
fragmented, contradictory but ultimately powerful nature of that voice
is, we argue, emblematic of a wider struggle that continues to
reverberate in the present moment.
Whilst we are interested in Love as a media figure, we also welcome
papers that center her musical legacy. Alongside the recent
re-evaluation of her treatment by the media of the ’90s has come a
re-evaluation of Hole’s contribution to rock music.
We welcome papers that situate themselves within the cultural moment and
consider music alongside their lyrics, fashion, their reception, and
audience engagement. We wish to avoid papers that simply focus on the
misogynistic culture of the music industry, the treatment of female
musicians or papers that particularly focus on recovering Courtney Love
as a much-maligned figure. In /Pitchfork/’s retrospective 10 out of 10
review of /Live Through This/(1994), Sasha Geffen writes that Love makes
an unprecedented incursion into the canon on male rock stars: “a famous
woman who screams for a living” in “raw, diaphagmatic bellows” that
shatter and puncture the male-dominated rock canon. Love is seen as a
provocateur and truth-teller whose lyrics are “analytical, no matter how
viscerally she howls them”; although grounded in collective and personal
trauma, their insightfulness transcends the merely confessional.
*OVER*
Contributions might consider, but are not limited to, the following topics:
·Courtney Love and Hole in relation to the current moment of 1990s revival
·The movement to re-center women’s actual cultural production over
concerns of celebrity and representation
·Hole, Love and the ‘90s seen through intersections of gender identity,
sexuality, race and ethnicity, class, dis/ability
·Analyses of Love the musician and artist
·Hole’s contributions to rock music
·Music, celebrity, and stardom
·Media forms and platforms: digital and analogue cultures, affect,
material culture and their relationship to media consumption and media
archives
·Remembering, nostalgia and revisionings of the ‘90s
·Fandoms and fan engagement with music/texts
·Music and narratives of social and cultural change
Potential contributors should first submit an abstract of approximately
500 words and a brief CV by October 15, 2023. Authors selected for
inclusion will be invited to submit manuscripts of 6,000-8,000 words by
April 15, 2024. All essays will be peer-reviewed using a double-blind
process.
Please send all abstracts and communications regarding this project to
(d.ferreday /at/ lancaster.ac.uk).
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