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[Commlist] CfP - "Sounds of Fascism: Media, Practices, Imagination" Conference
Tue Nov 05 22:42:58 GMT 2024
CfP - "Sounds of Fascism: Media, Practices, Imagination"
University of Bonn, September 24-26, 2025.
The word “fascism” designates a political category with a disputed
historical definition, as so-called “fascist” regimes and movements from
the end of the First World War to the present day can differ widely in
their forms and actions. Stanley Payne describes those of interwar
Europe using a wide range of criteria that specify their ideology,
aesthetics, organization and enemies (Payne 1980). For Roger Griffin,
who extends his study to post-World War II movements, their fundamental
and common characteristic is to be palingenetic ultra-nationalist
political projects (Griffin 1991). However, this proposal for a
consensual, root definition has not put an end to historiographical
(Costa Pinto 2011; Costa Pinto & Kallis 2014) or political debates, as
shown by the latest polemics concerning Trump’s indentification with
fascism (Zerofsky 2024). Considering the central role sound plays in the
mediation of politics, in political practices, and as a propaganda
instrument, how could its study contribute to this debate and help us
define fascism?
In order to address these issues, this conference will encompass a
period spanning from the interwar years to the present day, and
totalitarian regimes as well as small groups struggling for their
survival. It will focus on the political uses of sound as a means of
persuasion, amplification and expansion, through an estheticization –
musical, oratorical, event-based – of fascist political projects.
This conference will also focus on the conditions of these use’s
implementation, through the imaginaries that help shape these uses, the
media that support them, and the practices that carry them out. Its
epistemic framework will welcome interdisciplinary proposals from the
fields of political science and history, sound studies, media studies,
musicology and cultural sociology.
The aim will be to examine the musical and non-musical sounds produced
and disseminated as part of a fascist political project, by group
organizations and state institutions alike, in order to convey
information of all kinds, i.e. relating to current events, community
memories and future objectives, as well as to disseminate the aesthetic
sound framings associated with a particular form of fascism.
These sounds may concern, for instance, the political practices that
make up mass gatherings (Birdsall 2012) or invade ordinary public spaces
(Epping-Jäger 2010 & 2011), cultural policy efforts such as the
programming of festivals or opera seasons (Palazzetti 2021), the sonic
dimension of everyday life, where people listen to radio news broadcasts
or the latest propaganda song (Monteleone 1985), online propaganda,
cinema and audiovisual contents, or the creation of music groups or the
distribution of sound recordings marketed by small militant structures,
with aesthetics or textual references related to fascism (Multiple
Authors, 2004; Toscano & Di Nunzio 2016; François 2022).
It is then important to question listening practices and sound
cultures as fascist regimes have attempted to regulate them, or as
smaller organizations attempt to bring them into existence. For example,
we might look at a redefinition of the notions of listening, hearing,
noise and space in the light of fascism (Novak & Sakakeeny 2015). What
forms of listenings are sought in order to further fascist expansion
through more penetrating propaganda (Goodman 2010)? What signs are
desired or excluded from fascist sound cultures? How are the force and
even violence of amplified sound used in a fascist framework (Papenburg
2020)? While the soundscape can be seen as one of the everyday
frameworks of action (Guillebaud 2017), what would a fascist soundscape
be? So, if there is a “political ecology of the ear” (Pecqueux & Roueff
2009), is there a “fascist ecology of the ear” where sounds,
particularly music, contextually take on a particular political meaning
(Buch 2016, 2018)?
These questions can be addressed from the point of view of the media,
and thus of the mediations effected by various objects; of the sound
practices, notably of production and listening, that are engaged in by
the actors, be they regimes or small groups, of fascist politics or must
be engaged in by those they target; of the political imaginaries of
sound, which orient the theoretical conception of its fascist uses and
give them part of their effectiveness. We suggest below a number of
themes and questions that could be addressed at this conference:
Medias
- Technical mediations of sound (transduction, transmission,
conservation, amplification) and their relationship to space as
political territory
- Uses and incorporation of technical sound objects (loudspeakers,
radios, records, amplifiers, etc.) into fascist propaganda apparatuses
and their socio-technical networks
- Construction, development and durability of fascist sound broadcasting
institutions and structures
- Production and economics of sound media in fascist contexts
- Creative conditions and aesthetics of musical and non-musical sound
compositions
- Sound media and archives, time and memories of fascism
Practices
- Creating, occupying, appropriating and contesting a territory through
sound
- Does sonic totalitarianism exist, and if so, how?
- Linking sound and images in fascist propaganda
- Managing strangeness, hybridity and musical interpenetration in
gendered, ethnic or racial terms
- Sonic challenges to fascism and its repressive consequences
- What is the role of sound in fascist policing practices?
- Practices of silence in fascist regimes and organizations
- Organizing the sound dimension of fascist gatherings, from group
meetings to mass gatherings
- Sound commemorations
Imagination
- Modernity of sound objects
- Implementation, evolution and current relevance of the relationship
between fascism and the sound aesthetic avant-garde
- Establishment and evolution of the relationship between sound, war and
military imaginary within fascism
- Sound power and volume
- Positive and negative sonic imaginations of the foreigner in ethnic,
racial or political terms
- Imagined agency of sound forms
- Fascist sound and martyrology
The conference will be held in English on September 24, 25 and 26, 2025
at the Abteilung für Musikwissenschaft/Sound Studies of the University
of Bonn.
Proposals are for 20 min. presentations. They should be written in
English and should not exceed 250 words. They should be accompanied by a
short biography (no more than 120 words) and should be sent by January
15, 2025 to (jthomas2 /at/ uni-bonn.de).
Responses to proposals will be sent from February 15, 2025.
No payment from the authors will be required to attend or participate in
this conference.
This conference is part of a project that has received funding from the
European Union’s Horizon 2022 research and innovation programme under
the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement No 101105514.
Organisation : Jonathan Thomas (University of Bonn)
Scientific Committee : Esteban Buch (EHESS) ; Carolyn Birdsall
(University of Amsterdam) ; Ben Earle (University of Birmingham) ;
Stéphane François (University of Mons) ; Matthew Kerry (University of
Oxford) ; Nicolò Palazzetti (La Sapienza University of Rome) ; Jens
Gerrit Papenburg (University of Bonn) ; Susanna Pasticci (La Sapienza
University of Rome) ; Elodie Roy (University of Durham) ; Jedediah
Sklower (Labbex ICCA) ; Jonathan Thomas (University of Bonn) ; Benedetta
Zucconi (University of Cagliari)
Bibliography
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Medienwissenschaft, n° 31, p. 55-67.
[https://doi.org/10.14361/zfmw-2024-160207].
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nouvelle droite radicale italienne » in E. Grassy & J. Sklower,
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Mind. », The New York Times Magazine, October 23rd.
[https://www.nytimes.com/2024/10/23/magazine/robert-paxton-facism.html]
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