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[ecrea] PhD course on Genre at the University of Copenhagen
Tue Aug 17 14:07:33 GMT 2010
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>Challenging genres Genre challenges
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>Time: 17 November 11 am -19 November 3 pm, 2010
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>Place: University of Copenhagen
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>Course organizers: Professor Anne Jerslev and
>Assistant Professor Mette Mortensen, Department
>of Media, Cognition and Communication, Section
>of Film and Media Studies, The University of Copenhagen.
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>Course Content: Todayâ¬"s intensified blurring
>of boundaries between media, and between media
>and their audiences is challenging our
>understanding of genre. New genres emerge at the
>same rapid pace as old ones are contested or
>simply deemed out of date. Even though terms
>such as genre hybridity and cross genres have
>pointed to generic instabilities and experiments
>for a couple decades, the altered modes of
>production and distribution raise a number of
>topical questions: How should we understand
>genre today? In which ways might genre be a
>productive term for conceptualizing and
>comprehending the new digital media landscape?
>And not least, do we need to change our notions
>of traditional generic expressions, e.g. in film and television?
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>The focus of this PhD seminar is the
>transformation of genres. We welcome
>participants and presentations covering all
>aspects of genre and all media; theoretical as
>well as analytical contributions; contributions
>focusing on production processes, the market,
>the institutional framings and understandings of
>genre; new digital genres; questions of cross
>media and genre; questions of audience participation and genre.
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>Presentations by senior scholars
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>Genre in Media Production
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>Hanne Bruun, Associate Professor, Department of
>Information and Media Studies, The University of Aarhus.
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>How do we explain changes in media output? Are
>changes to media output a result of economic,
>political or other kinds of structural forces;
>or are they a result of the change producing
>agency of the media producers? I will suggest
>that taking a theoretical approach in pragmatic
>genre theory combined with the understanding of
>â¬Ügenre schemataâ¬" in socio-cognitive
>reception theory would help circumvent two
>classic dichotomies in media production
>analysis. Based on findings from my production
>analysis of Danish television satire, genre
>schemata seem to structure practices and belief
>systems among media professionals creating
>specific production cultures. However, these
>schemata change through the interpretation
>processes of media output production in
>recursive interplay with structural forces.
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>Television series: Genre aesthetics and social history.
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>Jostein Gripsrud, Professor, Department
>of Information Science and Media Studies,
>University of Bergen⬨and Centre
>franco-norvégien en sciences sociales et
>humaines, Fondation Maison des Sciences de lâ¬"Homme, Paris.
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>The basic idea in this paper is that the
>development of the TV series as an aesthetic
>form must be understood in relation to the
>history of television as a medium and a social
>institution on the one hand, and general
>socio-cultural history on the other. This is
>mainly argued referring to the history of US
>radio and television series, but examples will
>also be given from the UK, Germany and
>Scandinavia. The importance of differences
>between the US and European broadcasting systems
>are discussed, as well as the role of major
>technological developments such as the
>introduction of TV distribution via satellite
>and cable around 1980 and the digitisation processes around 20 years later.
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>A Media Aesthetic Reflection on Genre.
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>Liv Hausken, Associate Professor, Department of
>Media and Communication, University of Oslo.
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>Genre is widely used as classifying statement,
>especially in the field of arts and
>entertainment. However, there has been some concern that the rapid
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>advance in new technologies would have a
>detrimental and destabilizing effect on genre.
>The idea of a post medium condition where all
>kinds of cultural expressions can be available
>at the same platform, modified, altered and
>adjusted to a whole range of different displays,
>seems to have threatened not only the concept of
>medium but also that of genre. However, genre is
>a concept, and not a solid object. It represents
>a perspective. In this presentation I will argue
>that also medium should be considered a
>perspective, not a solid object, and that this
>affects the conception of genre. I will argue
>that moving from the idea of media as objects to
>mediations as processes and functions allows us
>to look into new cultural expressions without
>being restrained to see them as combinations of
>older, more or less stable or fixed entities.
>Contrary to this, an emphasis on mediation
>involves flexible distinctions between what is
>considered a genre rather than a style or a
>medium, so that a particular aspect of a complex
>apparatus not always and in all contexts must be considered as fixed.
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>Meta-Media and Meta-Communication Revisiting
>the Conncept of Genre in the Digital Environment
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>Klaus Bruun Jensen, Professor, Department of
>Media, Recognition and Communication, The University of Copenhagen.
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>As analytical categories, genres have
>traditionally occupied a middle ground - between
>media as technologies and institutions, on the
>one hand, and discourses as material and modal
>forms of expression and interaction, on the
>other. With digital media, the very concept of
>genre is in doubt: is the world wide web,
>Facebook, or the writing on its walls the genre?
>This lecture outlines a matrix of genres as
>communicative practices. First, the computer and
>the internet are described as meta-media,
>incorporating previous forms of media as well as
>genres. Second, genres are described as a
>variety of meta-communication, suggesting what
>kind of communication is being afforded. In
>conclusion, the lecture suggests that genre
>studies currently have the opportunity of coming
>back in style in the digital media environment:
>genres help to identify some of the distinctive
>features of digital media, not just as forms of
>representation, but also as resources of action.
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>ECTS points: Participation with paper: 3 ECTS.
>Participation without paper: 1½ ECTS
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>Costs and practical matters
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>The Danish Research School FMKJ covers all
>participation expenses (travel, meals,
>accommodation) for doctoral students who are
>enrolled members of FMKJ. Tickets and receipts
>must be sent to FMKJ for reimbursement.
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>Doctoral students from other national or
>international institutions are encouraged to
>participate. While the course itself is offered
>free of charge, they will have to pay their own
>travel and accommodation costs, and a fee of
>app. DKK 750 to cover lunches, coffee during
>intervals, etc. during the course. Prior to the
>course FMKJ will send an invoice for this amount to those who have enrolled.
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>Participants are expected to find accommodation
>for themselves, although the FMKJ secretary can suggest suitable hotels.
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>Course enrollment and application deadline
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>The course application, including a 1-page
>project outline, should be sent by email no
>later than October 1, 2010 to the FMKJ Secretary
>at <mailto:(fmkj /at/ ruc.dk)>(fmkj /at/ ruc.dk).
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>Participants who want to present a paper (10-12
>pages) for feedback must submit the paper by
>October 29, 2010 to <mailto:(fmkj /at/ ruc.dk)>(metmort /at/ hum.ku.dk).
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>Course readings
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>Course literature will be made available 3 weeks
>before the course with required reading and
>suggested literature for the Ph.D. course.
>Students are expected to have read the
>literature before the beginning of the course.
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>For further information: <http://www.fmkj.dk/>www.fmkj.dk
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Nico Carpentier (Phd)
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Vrije Universiteit Brussel - Free University of Brussels
Centre for Studies on Media and Culture (CeMeSO)
Pleinlaan 2 - B-1050 Brussels - Belgium
T: ++ 32 (0)2-629.18.56
F: ++ 32 (0)2-629.36.84
Office: 5B.401a
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New Book:
Trans-Reality Television
The Transgression of Reality, Genre, Politics, and Audience.
Lexington. (Sofie Van Bauwel & Nico Carpentier eds.)
http://www.lexingtonbooks.com/Catalog/SingleBook.shtml?command=Search&db=^DB/CATALOG.db&eqSKUdata=0739131885
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European Communication Research and Education Association
Web: http://www.ecrea.eu
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E-mail: (Nico.Carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
Web: http://homepages.vub.ac.be/~ncarpent/
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