Archive for calls, November 2025

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[Commlist] CFP: British Popular Culture(s) Conference

Fri Nov 21 10:59:45 GMT 2025






*British Popular Culture(s) Conference, 9-11th July 2026, Falmouth, Cornwall, UK. *
*/With the usual apologies for cross-posting/*
*
*
The British Popular Culture(s) Network is pleased to announce its next conference taking place, 9-11th July 2026, Falmouth, Cornwall, UK. _https://www.falmouth.ac.uk/research/projects/british-popular-cultures-network <https://www.falmouth.ac.uk/research/projects/british-popular-cultures-network>_ Following the success of this year’s inaugural conference, we want to continue fostering the breadth of scope in topics and speakers by creating an inclusive space for participants to come together to share, discuss, and develop ideas and practices which challenge assumptions, focus research and generate new thinking. 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 and utilising various methodologies and multi/trans disciplinary frameworks. There will again be a public-facing day hosted by The Cornish Bank, a grassroots music venue and community arts space in Falmouth. Confirmed participants are Cornish filmmaker BAFTA Award winning, Mark Jenkin director of /Bait /(2019), /Enys Men/ (2022) and forthcoming /Rose of Nevada/ (2025), and Welsh-Cornish musician and Welsh music prize winner, Gwenno, whose output includes, Cornish language album /Tresor/ (2022) and /Y Dydd Olaf/ (2014) and /Le Kov/ (2018). We have been approached by Intellect Publishing with regards to a ‘Handbook on British Popular Culture(s)’ and we will be inviting selected papers delivered at this year’s and the 2026 conference to be included in the handbook.
*Confirmed speakers for 2026: *
We are happy to announce *Jez Collins*, founder and director of the Birmingham Music Archive C.I.C, *Professor Abigail Gardner,* University of Gloucestershire and *Professor Oli Mould*, Royal Holloway University of London, will be joining the conference this year. *Jez Collins* is the founder and director of the Birmingham Music Archive C.I.C., a creative and cultural arts organisation that captures, documents and celebrates the music history, heritage and culture of Birmingham and its communities through a range of diverse and engaging projects. He is also founder of Atticus Creative & Cultural Consultancy, a cultural and creative consultancy that help develops cultural, creative, community and place-making strategies for those working in the built environment sector. In addition, Jez is a co-Director of Un-Convention C.I.C., a global grassroots music network that helps build sustainable music infrastructures and a widely published academic and public speaker. Jez sits on the Board for Soul City Arts and Digbeth Improvement District and he is a member of Bearwood Promoters in the Black Country, a group of voluntary music lovers who programme live music on a Victorian Bandstand. *Abigail Gardne*r is Professor of Cultural Studies and has published prolifically in her key research interests of music, gender and ageing. Monographs include/, Listening, Belonging and Memory/ (Bloomsbury, 2023), /Ageing and Contemporary Female Musicians /(2019, Routledge), and /PJ Harvey and Music Video Performance/ (AshgPJate, 2015). Abigail has led three European funded projects on digital storytelling, media literacy and migration and is Associate Editor of the Journal of The International Association of the Study of Popular Music. *Oli Mould* is Professor in Human Geography and whose research focuses on urban creativity, activism and politics, cutting across a number of scholarly concerns and disciplines such as, cultural studies and social theory. Oli has published work on the creative practices of cities, architecture, the representation of cities in film and labour in the creative economy. Monographs include, /Urban Subversion and the Creative City/ (2015), /Against Creativity/ (2018), /Seven Ethics Against Capitalism: Towards a Planetary Commons/ (2021) and /Postcapitalist Cities: Towards a Common Urban Future/ due to be published in 2026.

More events to be confirmed.
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.
Possible areas of interest 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 9th 2026* . All enquiries to be directed to the British Popular Culture email address.


The Brit Pop Cult Organising Committee
Kat Flint-Nicol, Neil Fox, Johny Lamb, Julie Ripley.

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