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[Commlist] CFP - A Nightmare on Elm Street @ 40, University of Nottingham
Tue Aug 13 15:18:07 GMT 2024
/One, two, Freddy’s coming for you…/
/A Nightmare on Elm Street/ @ 40
Hosted by The University of Nottingham in association with Fear2000
8-9 November 2024
Confirmed Keynote Speakers
Dr Bruna Foletto Lucas (Kingston University)
Dr Steve Jones (Northumbria University)
Special Guests
Mark Swift and Damian Shannon (screenwriters of /Freddy vs Jason/)
Dustin McNeill (author of /_Slash of the Titans: The Road to Freddy vs
Jason <https://www.harkerpress.com/freddyvsjason>_/)
_80s Video Shop <http://www.80svideoshop.co.uk/>_, Alfreton, will be
there with /A Nightmare on Elm Street/-themed exhibit
Screenings at _The Arc Cinema, Beeston <https://beeston.arccinema.co.uk/>_
/A Nightmare on Elm Street /(1984) in 4K - Friday 8 November
/Freddy vs Jason /(2003) - Saturday 9 November
_All included for registered attendees!_
The tale of a child murderer returned from beyond the grave to torment
the children of his killers, /A Nightmare on Elm Street /mutated into a
phenomenon thanks to its gruesome villain: the titan of popular culture
that is Freddy Krueger (Robert Englund).
Wes Craven’s original film spawned six sequels, a television series,
novels, comic books, a franchise crossover with /Friday the 13th/ and a
twenty-first century remake. Due to the film’s runaway success, New Line
Cinema gained the nickname “The House that Freddy Built,” Craven was
transported from the grimier margins of the horror genre to the
crowd-pleasing mainstream, and its stars – Englund and Heather
Langenkamp, the “Final Girl” – became genre icons. The series found
renewed success with its seventh instalment (itself turning 30 this
year), /Wes Craven’s New Nightmare /(1994), which anticipated the
postmodern rebirth of the horror genre with Craven’s next groundbreaking
project,/ Scream/ (1996).
Hosted by the University of Nottingham to coincide with the 40th
anniversary of the 1984 original, this conference offers us the chance
to explore, debate and celebrate the legacy of the /Nightmare/ series in
popular culture. Ultimately, the conference will aim to show why Freddy
still matters even after fourteen years of absence from our screens.
Proposals for papers are welcomed on any aspect of the franchise, including:
*
/A Nightmare on Elm Street /and New Line Cinema: The House that
Freddy Built
*
The Final Girl: gender and representation across the franchise
*
Freddy as ‘Return of the Repressed’: historical trauma
*
Freddy and Reaganism: Nightmares in suburbia
*
/A Nightmare on Elm Street /and queer politics
*
‘[In] a Black theater… the relationship to Freddy is closer than it
is to the victims’- Jordan Peele: /A Nightmare on Elm Street /and
BIPOC audiences
*
The ethics of Freddy Krueger: from child murderer to pop culture icon
*
/A Nightmare on Elm Street /as franchise: sequels, crossovers, TV
series, remake, video games, novels and comic books
*
‘Every kid knows who Freddy is. He’s like Santa Claus’: Audiences,
fandom, and legacy
Please submit abstracts of 250 words (max.) and a 100 word bio for
20-minute papers to (_elmstreet40 /at/ nottingham.ac.uk)
<mailto:(elmstreet40 /at/ nottingham.ac.uk)>_ by Friday 6 September 2024.
Sponsored by
British Association of Film, Television and Screen Studies The Arc
Cinema, Beeston Edinburgh University Press
/
/
/Generously supported by
/
Warner Bros. Discovery
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