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[Commlist] Call for Proposals for Online Symposium: Crude Representations: BP and the Cultural Imagination of Oil
Wed Aug 07 10:08:10 GMT 2024
Call for Proposals for Online Symposium: Crude Representations: BP and
the Cultural Imagination of Oil
Online Symposium Friday 24th January 2025
Keynote Speaker: Mona Damluji, Assistant Professor of Film & Media
Studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara
Oil is a cultural as well as material product. It is now pervasive in
every aspect of modern life: transport, energy, communications and
media, pharmaceuticals, farming, food ingredients and packaging, homes.
As many scholars in the energy and environmental humanities have
demonstrated, to understand our current dependence on oil and enact
decarbonisation we need to contend with its cultural dimensions.
Within the history of oil production, BP holds an important position as
one of the largest and longest running oil companies. Crude
Representations is a one-day symposium that looks to engage with the
cultural history of the company, bringing to light the multifaceted ways
in which artists, film-makers, authors, curators, performers, and other
cultural figures have responded to, critically interrogated, and
represented BP. The symposium aims to examine the rich, surprising, and
troubling history of cultural representations of BP and its activities
in extracting, refining, and selling oil and its derivatives. It will
explore how cultural figures from the early twentieth century to the
present have devised new and innovative modes of representation to
alternately facilitate, question, and resist BP’s history and operations
across the globe. The event will also examine and reassess BP’s role as
a patron and sponsor of the arts, and as a company producing its own
cultural works in the form of communications using myriad media for the
purposes of science, engineering, education and training, advertising
and PR, investor relations, and political influence. In so doing, we
hope to deepen the understanding of the cultural history of petroleum
and the ongoing legacies shaping the present moment of energy transition.
BP (including its antecedents (Anglo-Persian Oil Company (1909-1935);
Anglo-Iranian Oil Company (until 1954), British Petroleum (until 2001),
as well as subsidiaries) is one of the longest running oil
“supermajors”. Established in 1909 to exploit an oil concession in Iran,
in 1914 the British government took a controlling stake in the company
and the British navy became its largest customer, initiating a long
entanglement with the British Empire and states politics. The
nationalisation of the oil industry in Iran in 1951, and subsequent
US/UK backed coup in 1953, provoked a diversification and restructuring
of its activities. During this period, BP expanded its fields of
operation to Africa and North America, while also establishing itself as
a major contender within North Sea oil extraction. Its privatisation
after 1979, and involvement in numerous mergers and acquisitions, saw it
transform into the present day diverse multinational company, with
annual profits of $13.8bn (£11bn) in 2023. At the same time that it
accrued massive profits, the company was involved in a number of
environmental catastrophes, including the Torrey Canyon spill in 1967
and the Deepwater Horizon spill in 2010, while also facing criticism
over employment and working conditions, human rights violations,
political influence, and market manipulation.
This symposium is multi-disciplinary, inviting contributions from across
all academic disciplines as well as other arts and cultural
institutions. It seeks to examine cultural and artistic forms including:
film, television, drama and other performance forms, poetry, novels and
other prose forms, photography, painting and other fine arts, sculpture
and installation art, architecture, music, graphic design and other
visual arts, sports, video games, digital art, and new media.
This symposium will also seek to be critical and self-reflective about
the topic and our approach to it. What are the benefits and challenges
of making a single oil company the primary organising principle of
research, rather than other disciplinary, media, or theoretical norms?
How can we ensure our work does not replicate the unjust and inequitable
basis of extractivism, and instead provides a diverse and inclusive
space for new ways of thinking about oil? How can our historical inquiry
inform and contribute to present day imperatives for sustainability and
energy transition?
We invite proposals on the topic of the multi-dimensional relationship
between the arts and BP.
Potential topics could include (but are not limited to):
• Historical changes in the representation and cultural outputs of BP •
Indigenous, local, national, and cross-cultural artistic responses to
BP’s operations
• Artistic and cultural movements in countries and regions with dominant
BP involvement • Literary works and other narrative forms that directly
or indirectly engage with BP, its activities and sites of extraction and
production • Adaptation and translation of works stimulated and
facilitated by BP’s multinational presence • BP sponsorship of arts, and
divestment and boycott campaigns related to it
• Biographical or professional links between BP and cultural figures
• Greenwashing, artwashing, and BP’s negotiation of its social license
to operate
• The cultural impact of the changing political and economic context of
BP, from the British Empire to global multinational public limited company
• Corporate artworks and architecture, investment art and collections
• BP advertising and public relations
• Internal BP operational and industrial media productions (scientific,
educational, investor relations) • BP as award winner and awards patron
(BP film Giuseppina (1959) was winner of the Academy Award for Best
Documentary (Short Subject); the BP Portrait Award at the National
Portrait Gallery 1990-2020)
• Specific events in BP’s corporate history and their representation in
or impact on arts and culture (the nationalisation of oil production in
Iran, Torrey Canyon tanker spill, the Iranian Islamic Revolution, the
discovery of North Sea oil, privatisation, Kirki tanker spill, Deepwater
Horizon platform spill) • Historiography and prior research of BP’s
involvements in arts and culture • The art and performance of oil
activism and protest • The representation and imagination of energy
transition
• The aesthetics of the changing BP logo and branding
• BP petrol/gas stations and product placement in popular entertainment
(James Bond (From Russia with Love (1963), Goldfinger (1964), On Her
Majesty's Secret Service (1969) and A View to a Kill (1985)), The Firm
(1993), I’m Alan Partridge (1997), The Bourne Identity (2002), Hung
(2009), Hillbilly Elegy (2020), Slow Horses (2022))
• Celebrity endorsement and spokespeople (Bob Hoskins, Steven Spielberg,
Ron Ananian, Terry Thomas, Jimmy Nail, Fenella Fielding, Jack Kelly)
• Comparative studies of BP’s cultural impact (with other oil companies;
across different media; historically)
• BP in education and schools outreach • The BP Archive (University of
Warwick) and BP Video Library, their potentials and restrictions for
arts research, and alternative archives for BP media
Symposium Organisers: Peter Adkins (University of Edinburgh) and Malcolm
Cook (University of Southampton)
To propose a contribution please submit an abstract (max 300 words) and
a short bio (max 100 words) VIA THIS FORM
https://forms.office.com/e/N7Lbsdg0XV by Monday 23rd September 2024.
As well as conventional 15-minute academic conference papers, we welcome
proposals for other formats appropriate to the topic and online venue,
such as practice-based outputs or collaborative presentations and
performances.
Submissions are welcome from any part of the world and timings of this
online event will be arranged to be broadly inclusive. Notification of
acceptance will be sent by Monday 2nd December 2024
If you have any queries regarding this event please contact us via
email: (m.cook /at/ soton.ac.uk) and (peter.adkins /at/ ed.ac.uk)
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