Archive for calls, 2024

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[Commlist] Call for abstracts: British Popular Culture(s) Conference

Tue Sep 24 07:41:08 GMT 2024




Call for abstracts: British Popular Culture(s) Conference.
We are pleased to announce the launch of the British Popular Culture(s) Network, with an inaugural annual conference taking place at Falmouth University, between 5-7th June 2025.

The conference is open to researchers, academics, PhD students, practitioners, artists, curators, archivists and activists working in and across all areas of British popular culture and cognate disciplines. Britain has a vibrant heritage and history of popular culture, and a long tradition of cultural thinkers who have linked spheres of popular culture together but also approached them as separate entities. Fundamental to a vibrant, diverse, and sustainable popular culture is active creative participation and critical thinking to change, contest, and renew. This conference continues this spirit, accepting contributions from those involved in all aspects of critical appreciation, cultural scenes and practices, and utilising various methodologies and multi/trans disciplinary frameworks. The aim of the conference is to create a space for participants to come together to share, discuss, and foster ideas and practices which challenge assumptions, focus research and generate new thinking.

British popular culture continues to experience extraordinary ideological and political provocations, whilst facing commercial and socio-economic pressures. These pressures and challenges have been amplified by the impact of the Covid pandemic and fourteen years of a hostile Conservative government. The conference takes as its premise that popular culture is an evolving, dynamic social and creative process involving the self, community, and wider social structures which circulate and navigate capitalism. At this pivotal moment the conference and network will build a community of connections across academia and the cultural industries, creating a third sector to support and sustain future work and collaborations through conferences, events, and research, amongst other activities. Taking place in Falmouth, Cornwall, a site of importance at the intersection of popular cultures and education, the conference will work in partnership with the local creative industry to highlight and discuss challenges facing regional creative and cultural economies. A hope of the event is that the highlighting of the richness, uniqueness, solidarity and precarity of regional popular cultures and how they entwine with wider discourses across the British Isles will be taken up in different locales for future iterations of the conference. We invite individual abstracts for papers, performances, spoken word pieces, and short films (no longer than 20 minutes in length), as well as themed panels (no longer than 60 minutes in length). We also welcome ideas for further creative content such as exhibitions and workshops that can be integrated into the event through conversations with the conference team. Much of this event will take place in popular culture spaces in Falmouth such as multi-purpose arts venues, music and stand-up comedy venues, and cinemas, ensuring a representation in place of the discipline specific and interdisciplinary ideas being discussed.


Possible topics to include, but not limited to:
Advertising
Architecture
Art
Board Games and Pastimes
Comedy
Comics
Costume
Dance
Design
Fashion
Film
Illustration
Journalism
Literature
Media
Music
Performance
Poetry
Pubs
Sport
Television
Video Games
Festivals and Events
Politics and popular culture
Cultural policy
Popular culture and democracy
Popular culture and social justice
Popular culture and environmental crisis
Popular Culture and inequality
Pedagogies of Popular Culture
Popular Culture and the REF
Popular Culture in/and Education
Gender, class, sexuality, race
Alternative scenes and practices, DIY culture.
Popular culture industries
Emerging modes
Regional, local, and national cultural and creative economies
National popular culture in a global context
Space, place, tourism
Consumerism
Capitalism, Co-option and Commodification
Colonial and postcolonialism
Precarity and Sustainability
Activism
Celebrity
Celebrity Activism and Dissent
Archives, curation, programming
Cultural thinkers
Digitalisation and digital technologies
AI and technological impacts
The Popularisation of Folk Cultures

Please submit an abstract no longer than 300 words, five keywords and a short bio (including contact details) to, (_britishpopularculture /at/ falmouth.ac.uk) <mailto:(britishpopularculture /at/ falmouth.ac.uk)>_ by *January 10th 2025* .
Organising committee: Kat Flint-Nicol, Neil Fox, Simon Poole, Julie Ripley.


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