Magical
Cities
15th June
2019
Keynote
speaker: Dr Matthew Sangster, University of Glasgow
The
University of Portsmouth’s Supernatural Cities research group presents their
fourth conference: Magical Cities.
This
one-day conference seeks to explore the magical potential of urban
environments. To what extent are fictional cities ‘real’ or grounded in
reality? In what ways are ‘real’ cities fictional or fantastical creations of
their observers and inhabitants? How have people historically imagined the
urban environment and through what social, cultural, literary or political
lenses? How might the geography of the city space suggest surreal, unreal,
supernatural or magical characteristics or personalities? How do such spaces
affect our identities?
We
particularly welcome abstracts from PGRs and ECRs. In the interests of making
this conference as interdisciplinary as possible, we also welcome abstracts
from across disciplines and approaches including: History, Literature,
Sociology, Art History, Psychogeography, Cultural Studies, Journalism, Creative
Arts, Game Design.
Topics may
include but are not limited to:
- Cities & time: how city living and exploration affect our perceptions of the passage of time
- Cities as multidimensional spaces: hidden cities within cities
- Cities as monstrous spaces
- Urban ecosystems
- Cities as illusion
- Magical urban tours (e.g. Mystic London (1875), Là-bas (1891))
- Audio-dramas/podcasts centering on weird urban spaces and their depictions (e.g. Welcome to Night Vale, Limetown)
- Utopian and dystopian cities
- ‘Punked’ cities (e.g. steampunk, cyberpunk)
- Controlling fantastical cities: governments, monarchies, legal systems as magic systems
- ‘Real’ versus ‘Fictional’ cities – a false dichotomy?
- Affecting architecture – how creativity shapes spaces, and their inhabitants
- Reimaginings of ‘real’ cities: NeoVictorianism, science fiction, fantasy, historical fiction
Please send
an abstract of no more than 300 words, a 50 word biographical note and up to
four relevant keywords (e.g. magic, author name, monsters, architecture) to
supernaturalcities@port.ac.uk by January 31st 2019.
More
information on the Supernatural Cities project.
Please send
both paper proposals and panel proposals to:
Associate
Professor John WP Phillips
Executive
Committee Member of the APL
Email: info@philosophyliterature.com
Deadline
has been extended to: 15th January 2019
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