[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[Commlist] Conference June 10-11th Representation of Diversity in Mediated Popular Culture in the Twenty First Century
Fri Nov 17 05:28:25 GMT 2023
*CALL FOR ABSTRACTS: Representation of Diversity in Mediated Popular
Culture in the Twenty First Century*
Mediated popular culture consists of shared images, ideas, and objects,
which emerge through a process of mass production aimed at a wide
audience (Kidd et al, 2017). Today, digitalization paves the way for
innovative models of visual creation, challenging both the elitist
notions of “great art” and the “populist” conceptions of popular art
(Laugier, 2023). In conjunction with globalization, digitalization has
led to an increase in the circulation of transnational cultural
products—such as TV series, films, video games, social media content,
etc. —and in the diversity of their countries of origin, while also
broadening their target audiences.
Million viewers watched the French TV series /Lupin,/ starring black
French actor Omar Sy in 2021 (Diallo, 2023), while both the U.S. TV
drama /Bridgerton/, which addresses race relations, and the South Korean
dystopian drama /Squid Game /on Netflix became the platform’s
most-watched TV series, each attracting over 100 million viewers. In
2022, the British TV series /Sex/ /Education/, lauded for its
intersectional approach to gender and sexuality, and the Japanese anime
/One/ /Piece/ ranked among the most-watched (and most anticipated) shows
on Netflix. Films examining race relations (/Get Out/, /12 Years a
Slave/), intersectionality (/Moonlight, Barbie/), body dysmorphia (/The/
/Whale/), or produced outside Western countries (/Parasite/ from South
Korea; /Slumdog/ /Millionaire/ from India), or featuring predominantly
non-white casts (/Everything Everywhere All at Once; Black Panther/),
have not only won prestigious awards, but also achieved significant
global box-office success.
The extension to social media platforms confirms that contemporary
visual popular culture is not only globalized but can also be measured
in tangible, significant numbers (Lecler, 2019). Forbes’ 2023 list of
the Top 50 Creators represents a diverse group of media producers who
have collectively amassed 2.6 billion followers and earned $570 million
(Bertoni, 2023). Moreover, the most popular YouTube channels originate
from India, while hundreds of millions watch the latest music videos
from Nigerian rapper Rema or Barbadian R&B singer Rihanna on YouTube,
while simultaneously streaming their albums on various platforms and
attending their concerts worldwide.
While popular culture may be seen as capitalistic (Horkheimer & Adorno,
2002), owing to its capacity to transform billions of viewers into
consumers, it also possesses significant democratic potential. It does
not require formal or technical training to engage with its imagery
(Laugier, 2023; Schuster, 2017), nor does it demand considerable
cultural capital to be appreciated (Parker, 2011). Television series and
popular cultural forms thus provide and confront viewers with a plethora
of ideas and styles (Hirsch & Newcomb, 1983), which can modify people’s
beliefs or knowledge or reinforce existing viewpoints (Furman Daniel &
Musgrave, 2017), as well as influence their self-image (Fardouly &
Vartanian, 2016; Saiphoo & Vahedi, 2019).
Engaging with visual popular culture entails understanding its global
and symbolic importance, but also considering how audiences interpret it
(Fiske, 1991). TV series, films, social media, music, and other forms
can be seen as spaces where artistic, ethical, and hermeneutic authority
is reclaimed and re-routed, empowering viewers to create, share, and
discuss content. The audience plays an active role in shaping the
meaning of popular culture texts with viewers not just as passive
consumers but as active participants in the reception and interpretation
of cultural products (Fiske, 1991). Moreover, with the rise of social
media, popular culture has become marked by the emergence of a
participatory culture (Jenkins, 2006) where consumers not only comment
on but also remix existing cultural products on digital platforms
(Jenkins, 2006).
At the heart of popular culture lie the characters depicted on
screen—whose lives, feelings, opinions, physical features, and actions
are observed, analyzed, and discussed amongst audiences. Representation
of diversity in contemporary popular culture has its
contradictions. Although, in the past, films and TV series, particularly
in Western nations, tended to feature homogeneous ensemble
casts—typically white and male-dominated (Europe, U.S.), recent studies
show that the situation has improved. At the same time, however, we
still see that characters of minority ethnic backgrounds, the LGBTQ
community, the elderly, and those with disabilities are often subject to
stereotypes and underrepresentation (Ramon & Tran., 2023). On the other
hand, today’s most popular creators, influencers, and streamers as a
group represent more gender and racial/ethnic diversity than ever before
(Bertoni, 2023). This shift raises new questions as recent studies
emphasizes not only the role of an active audience, but also the
production processes behind the on-screen representation (Renshon, 2014;
Bal & Velkamp, 2013; Mares & Woodward, 2005; Brusselle & Crandall,
2002). Thus, discussions on diversity cannot be reduced to calculating
on-screen presence but should rather aim to take a more holistic
perspective and interrogate how diversity on screen materializes through
production processes and audience discourse.
Amidst a surge in publications analyzing the representation of diversity
in popular culture (Nwonka, 2023; Hole et al, 2017; Gay, 2014; Sulimma,
2021; Grandin, 1995), this international conference seeks to foster a
transdisciplinary dialogue on how diversity is depicted, received, and
produced in contemporary visual popular culture, from its traditional
forms (TV series, films) to the latest evolutions (global social media
platforms), thereby embracing Hall’s concept of culture as a continual
process of deconstruction and construction of meaning (1997).
**
We invite scholars to submit proposals for paper presentations on topics
that may align with, but are not limited to, the following themes:
* Female/Male gaze in popular culture.
* Conceptualizations and representations of masculinity/ femininity.
* Discourses on race and ethnicity.
* Representational tropes and stereotypes.
* LGBTQ+ visibility and representation.
* Inclusivity and intersectional storytelling.
* Crip theory and popular culture.
* Ageism and the elderly in media portrayals.
* Body positivity movement and popular culture.
* Representation of mental health issues.
The conference will take place on *June 10^th and 11^th 2024 *in
Rotterdam (The Netherlands). Conference language is English.
Contributions should not exceed a speaking time of 20 minutes.
Proposals, which should include an abstract (*maximum 300 words),* as
well as a short bio-bibliographical note, should be received by *5
January 2024* and should be directed to (diversityrotterdam /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(diversityrotterdam /at/ gmail.com)>. Participants will be notified
about the selection by *15 February 2024*.
**
*Steering Committee*
Alexandre Diallo (Erasmus University Rotterdam); Sandra Laugier
(University Paris 1 Pantheon-Sorbonne; ERC DEMOSERIES); Ginette
Vincendeau (King’s College London); Isabel Awad (Erasmus University
Rotterdam); Jacco van Sterkenburg (Erasmus University Rotterdam); Mary
Harrod (Warwick University); Juliet Floyd (Boston University); Jessica
Ford (University of Adelaide); Paul McDonald (King’s College London);
Charles-Antoine Courcoux (Universite Lausanne); Helle Kannick Haastrup
(University of Copenhaguen); Shin Hae Rin (Korea University); Karla
Bessa (Universidade Estadual de Campinas/UNICAMP)
*Hosting Committee*
Alexandre Diallo (Erasmus University Rotterdam); Sergül Nguyen (Erasmus
University Rotterdam); Jacco van Sterkenburg (Erasmus University
Rotterdam); Tatsiana Zhurauliova (University Paris 1-Pantheon Sorbonne;
ERC DEMOSERIES);
**
**
*Contact*: Alexandre Diallo (Erasmus School of History, Culture and
Communication)
: (diallo /at/ eshcc.eur.nl) <mailto:(diallo /at/ eshcc.eur.nl)>
This event is co-organized by the Erasmus University Rotterdam and
DEMOSERIES, a European Research Council project hosted at University
Paris 1 Pantheon-Sorbonne and funded under the European Union’s Horizon
2020 research and innovation program.
**
*BIBLIOGRAPHY*
Bal, P. M., & Veltkamp, M. (2013). How Does Fiction Reading Influence
Empathy? An
Experimental Investigation on the Role of Emotional Transportation.
/PLoS ONE,/ 8(1)
Bertoni, S. (2023, September 26). Forbes Top Creators 2023. Forbes.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/stevenbertoni/2023/09/26/top-
<https://www.forbes.com/sites/stevenbertoni/2023/09/26/top->
creators2023/?sh=2d4731674c0c.
Busselle, R., & Crandall, H. (2002). Television viewing and perceptions
about race
differences in socioeconomic success. Journal of Broadcasting &
Electronic Media,
46(2), 265–282.
Cavell, S. (1988). /Conditions Handsome and unhandsome/.//The University
of Chicago Press.
Cavell, S. (1989). /This New yet Unapproachable America: Lectures after
Emerson after/
/Wittgenstein/. The University of Chicago Press.
Diallo, A. (2023). “Arsène Lupin, James Bond noir : les séries télévises
comme lieu
d’appropriation culturelle”. CNRS Éditions, 2023, in Laugier (eds), /Les
séries/
/ Laboratoires d’éveil politique/.
Fardouly, J., & Vartanian, L. R. (2016). Social media and body image
concerns: Current
research and future directions. /Current Opinion in/ /Psychology/, 9, 1–5.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.copsyc.2015.09.005
<https://doi.org/10.1016/j.copsyc.2015.09.005>.
Fellner A. M., Fernández-Morales M., Martausová M. (eds.) (2017).
/Rethinking Gender in/
/Popular Culture in the 21st Century: Marlboro Men and California Gurls/,
Newcastle upon Tyne, Cambridge Scholars Publishing.
Fiske, J. (1991). /Understanding popular culture/. London and New York:
Routledge.
Furman Daniel J, Musgrave P., Synthetic Experiences: How Popular Culture
Matters for
Images of International Relations, /International Studies Quarterly/,
Volume 61, Issue 3, September 2017, Pages 503–516,
https://doi.org/10.1093/isq/sqx053 <https://doi.org/10.1093/isq/sqx053>_._
Gay, R. (2014). /Bad Feminist. /New York: Harper.
Grandin, T. (1995). /Thinking in pictures/. New York, NY: Vintage. Press
Random House.
(Expanded version 2006).
Hall S., (1997). “Introduction” in /Representation: Cultural
Representations and Signifying/
/Practices/. ed. Stuart Hall (London: Sage Publications), 3.
Hirsch, P. & Newcomb H. (1983). Television as Cultural Forum:
Implications for
Research/. Quarterly Review of Film Studies/. 8: 45–55.
Hole K., Jelača D., Kaplan E., Petro P. (2017). /The Routledge Companion
to Cinema & Gender/.
Horkheimer, M. & Adorno. T. W. (2002). /Dialectic of Enlightenment.
/Translated by
Jenkins, H. (2006). /Convergence Culture: Where Old and New Media
Collide/. New York:
New York University Press.
Kidd, D., Kim, J., & Turner, A. (2017). Popular Culture. In K. Korgen
(Ed.), /The Cambridge/
/Handbook of Sociology: Specialty and Interdisciplinary Studies/ (pp.
284-292).
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/9781316418369.030.
Laugier, S. (2023). /TV-philosophy: How TV series change our thinking/.
University Exeter
Press.
Laugier, S. (2012) “Popular Cultures, Ordinary Criticism: A Philosophy
of Minor Genres”.
/Modern Language Notes/. vol. 127 (5). pp. 997-1012.
Lecler, R. (2019). What makes globalization really new? Sociological
views on our current
globalization. /Journal of Global History/.14(3).355-373.
doi:10.1017/S1740022819000160.
Mares, M-L, & Woodard, E. (2005). Positive Effects of Television on
Children's Social
Interactions: A Meta-Analysis. /Media Psychology/, 7(3), 301–322.
Nwonka, C. (2023). /Black Boys The Social Aesthetics of British Urban
Film/. Bloomsbury.
Parker, H. N. (2011). Toward a definition of popular culture. /History
and Theory/, 50(2), 147–
170. http://www.jstor.org/stable/41300075
<http://www.jstor.org/stable/41300075>.
Panofsky, E. (1936). /Style and Medium in the Motion Pictures,
reprinted/ in /Panofsky, E./
/(1995). Three Essays on Style. Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT
Press./ Cavell,
1979.
Ramón AC, Tran, M. (2023). Hollywood diversity report 2020: a tale of
two Hollywoods.
UCLA College of Social Sciences.
https://socialsciences.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/UCLA-
<https://socialsciences.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/UCLA->HollywoodDiversity-Report-2023-Film-3-30-2023.pdf
Renshon, J. (2014). Physiological Arousal and Political Beliefs.
/Political Psychology/, 20(2).
Saiphoo, A. N., & Vahedi, Z. (2019). A meta-analytic review of the
relationship between
social media use and body image disturbance. /Computers in Human
Behavior/, 101,
259–275. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chb.2019.07.028
<https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chb.2019.07.028>.
Schuster, M. (2017). /New Television. The aesthetics and Politics of a
genre/. The University
Of Chicago Press.
Sulimma M. (2021). Gender and Seriality: Practices and Politics of
Contemporary US
Television. Edinburgh: University Press.
---------------
The COMMLIST
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier. Please use it responsibly and wisely.
--
To subscribe or unsubscribe, please visit http://commlist.org/
--
Before sending a posting request, please always read the guidelines at http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ commlist.org)
URL: http://nicocarpentier.net
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]