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[Commlist] conference UK Screen Industries in a Global Context, 1994-2024
Tue Mar 05 16:25:57 GMT 2024
*Conference call for papers:*
*‘Weddings and Funerals: UK Screen Industries in a Global Context,
1994-2024’, 13-14^th June 2024**
*
*A** 2-day conference organised by the Centre for Converged Screen
Media and Entertainment (COSME
<https://www.liverpool.ac.uk/communication-and-media/research/groups/centre-for-converged-screen-media-and-entertainment/>),
Department of Communication and Media,* *University of Liverpool,*
*13-14 June 2024*
*Keynote Speakers:**
**Dr Kay Dickinson* (University of Glasgow, author of /Supply Chain
Cinema: Producing Global Film Workers/, 2024)
*Roger Shannon* (Producer and Former Head of BFI Production Board,
Former Head of the Moving Image Development Agency and Former Head of
Production Department, UK Film Council)
Looking at the last 30 years (1994-2024), this 2-day conference will
examine the ways the UK screen industries were integrated into the
structures of global media production, distribution and
exhibition/retail, and how important shifts whose origins can be mapped
to that point in time have had a lasting and significant legacy. In
doing this, the event aims to provide a thorough account of the
multiple, complex and diverse ways in which the UK screen
industries participated in an increasingly globalised, converged and
highly unpredictable media landscape over the past 30 years.
Covering film, television, gaming, transmedia franchising and sports, it
will also consider the ways elements of these came to intersect and
redefine the UK entertainment context. It will bring together scholars
with an interest in media industries research and practitioners who were
involved in developments in the UK screen industries to explore this
history from various vantage points.
In 1994 the global success of /Four Weddings and a Funeral/ launched a
new era for the British film industry. The companies involved in the
film’s production (PolyGram Filmed Entertainment, Working Title and
Channel Four Films) quickly became key players in the global film
industry, participating in a huge number of productions and
collaborating with foremost media players, such as StudioCanal and
Universal, as well as companies that were key players in a thriving
indie/specialty film in the United States (Miramax, Fox Searchlight and
Focus Features).
1994 also saw the development of the Leavesden Aerodrome into a film
studio by James Bond producer EON for /GoldenEye/ (1995), a facility
that was then used by Lucasfilm for /Star Wars Episode 1: The Phantom
Menace /(1999) and the /Harry Potter/ films (2001-2011). Warner Bros.
bought the facility outright in 2010 and turned it to both an exhibition
space for the /Harry Potter/ franchise and a major working studio that
has hosted /Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation/ (2015), /Wonder Woman
/(2017), /Barbie/ (2023) and /Wonka/ (2023).
Also in 1994, Pearson Television started its corporate journey to become
FremantleMedia, following its takeover of Thames TV a year earlier; a
journey that would involve global partners such as entertainment
conglomerate Bertelsmann and (part-)ownership of internationally
successful formats as …/Idol/, /X Factor/ and …/Got Talent/.
Furthermore, Sky Sports launched its second channel Sky Sports 2 to meet
a staggering demand for sports on television amidst rising SKY
subscribers. It continues to dominate sports television in the UK,
withstanding competition from globally operating streaming and
telecommunications companies.
Finally, 1994 saw Sony Computer Entertainment Europe opening its London
branch, making the UK a key region of its global operations in time for
the release of the first PlayStation console. Sports Interactive, a
London-based games development company found immediate global success
with Championship Manager and Football Manager, eventually becoming a
subsidiary of Sega, the Japanese videogame and entertainment conglomerate.
*Taking this 30-year period as its time span, this conference will
explore recent UK screen industries histories in a global context, with
a view to understanding:**
*
* the business strategies the main companies in film, TV and
videogames utilised, andthe kinds of business deals being made
* the ways they marked their presence as part of co-productions and
other collaborative arrangements
* the power dynamics involved in their dealings with major global
players, such as the Hollywood studios, the main streaming platforms
and videogame giants, such as Nintendo and Microsoft
* their sources of finance within an ever-changing media production
landscape
* the production and distribution practices they developed to make
their product globally appealing
* the ways in which they helped shape the trajectory of media labour
in the UK and the questions of diversity and equality such a
trajectory entailed
* the ways they impacted the development of media policies in the UK
* their relationship with the UK government and key institutions
overseeing the development of screen industries in the UK (DCMS,
Ofcom, BFI, etc)
* the regulatory frameworks imposed by the various governments and
administrations during the period
* their place in cultural and creative industries discourses as these
started to develop in the 1990s
* the ways they contributed to a converging media landscape in the UK
and beyond
the successes and failures they had and the ways these shaped the
key screen industries sectors in the country
*
the ways the UK screen industries are looking into the future as we
approach the midpoint of the third decade of the 21st century.
*We are inviting**
*- proposals of up to 300 words, accompanied by a bio of up to
50 words
- pre-constituted panels of up to 3 speakers, with each panel
proposal consisting of a panel topic accompanied by an abstract of
up to 200 words as well as abstracts for each of the three
presentations and bio details of up to 50 words for each speaker
- pre-constituted round table workshops of up to 4 speakers,
with each workshop consisting of a workshop topic, accompanied by an
abstract of up to 200 words, abstracts of up to 100 words on the
aspect of the workshop each speaker will contribute to and bio
details of up to 50 words for each speaker
*Please send your proposals to (cosme /at/ liverpool.ac.uk) by 24 March
2024.**
*
We are looking forward to seeing you in Liverpool.
Sarah Thomas and Yannis Tzioumakis
Co-directors of COSME
<https://www.liverpool.ac.uk/communication-and-media/research/groups/centre-for-converged-screen-media-and-entertainment/>:
the Centre for Converged Screen Media and Entertainment and
Conference Organisers
<https://www.liverpool.ac.uk/communication-and-media/research/groups/centre-for-converged-screen-media-and-entertainment/>
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