I am
looking for proposals for chapters for an academic book that aims to examine
the manifestation of collective societal fears in film. This collection will
cover films specifically from the time period of 1998-2020. This collection is
under contract with McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers and will be
released in 2020.
The past
few decades proved themselves very tumultuous-- constant snowballing from one
issue to the next left America with a sense of constant impending doom. From
Y2K, terrorism, xenophobia, rapid technological advancements, the economy
crash, changes in political climates, racism, sexism, challenges to
heteronormative standpoints, homeland tension, to anxiety surrounding personal
liberties, an undercurrent of fear lurked.
Feeding
Cultural Fear: Essays on Films During a Time of Transition, 1998-2020 proposes
to explore and analyze collective cultural fears and the ways in which specific
films/film franchises speak to or manifest these fears. Some films are blatant,
while others may require more of a metaphoric reflection.
Successful
proposals will examine a film or films from a retrospective stance, addressing
the cultural issues surrounding the time period/events, and a film’s function
during this time. Preferentially, proposals should also explore how these films
still hold relevance today as America has undergone social, economical,
political, and technological transitions. Comparative reflections of numerous
films from 1998 to the present and the ways in which the narratives speak to
one another are particularly advised. Selected essays will need to be
5,000-7,000 words in length.
An example
of the dynamics this collection aims to explore is Planet of the Apes. In many
cases, the fears expressed in a specific time period can mirror fears in
different cultural climates. For example, the revival of the Planet of the Apes
franchise demonstrates the ways in which the film's message holds true over the
span of decades. The films are still relevant even when rebooted in 2001
because the fears expressed can become a personal effect for the audience. When
released in the 1970s, the franchise spoke to a range of fears from technology
and racism to the Cold War, but its strong following in today's society shows
how these fears are still relevant and prevalent, (not literally the Cold War,
but similar tensions, etc.) The various
Ape films have been incredibly popular and speak to audiences numerous times
between 2001 through 2020 when another will be released. Mass consumption
demonstrates the flexibility of these narratives in different cultural
situations. These films scratch subconscious itches for audience members. Some
films transcend the turn of the millenium and carry the brunt of issues still
relevant in today’s society, offering numerous avenues for interpretation and
analysis for scholars and film aficionados from all walks of life.
Proposals
should delve into discourse that bridges what this film reveals about society,
or how it fulfills subconscious urges for the audience, while reflecting on
time periods as is appropriate for a text that revisits an older film.
The
Deadlines:
I will
accept abstracts on a rolling basis up until March 1, 2019. Those whose abstracts are accepted will be
sent the style guide and information regarding the preparation of manuscripts.
Contributors
must submit the first draft of their essays to me by August 1, 2019. Feedback
and an opportunity for final edits are due following peer review process.
Specific dates for final drafts will be given at a later date.
Please
note, no extensions can be given once accepted, so please only submit abstracts
if you are certain you can adhere to this timetable.
I am
looking for essays on any topics relating to the film’s theme, visuals,
allusions, actors, and relevance in today’s society. Authors are invited to
submit proposals related, but not limited to, any of the following films:
1998- The
Truman Show, Armageddon, Dark City, Enemy of the State, American History X
1999- The
Matrixfranchise, Boys Don't Cry (proto-gender/trans movement and the ways in
which it speaks to 2020 audiences), Blair Witch Project franchise
2000- Cast
Away, American Psycho, The Cell, Final Destination franchise
2001- Enemy
at the Gates, A.I., I Am Sam, Planet of the Apes franchise, Lord of the
Rings franchise
2002- Panic
Room, Mothman Prophecies, 28 Days Later
2003- Kill
Bill franchise
2004- The
Passion of the Christ, Dawn of the Dead, The Village, Fahrenheit 9/11, The Day
After Tomorrow, I-Robot, National Treasure
2005- King
Kong, Brokeback Mountain, Syriana, The Constant Gardener, Aeon Flux
2006- Pan's
Labyrinth, Apocalypto, Babel, Idiocracy
2007- The
Mist, There Will be Blood, Into the Wild, 28 Weeks Later
2008- The
Dark Knight, Wall-E, Cloverfield, Gran Torino, The Boy in the Striped Pajamas,
Milk, Revolutionary Road
2009-
District 9, The Road, Law Abiding Citizen, 2012
2010-
Inception, Shutter Island
2011- Super
8, Limitless
2012- Django Unchained, Zero Dark Thirty, Prometheus, Brave, Hunger Games franchise,
Paranorman, Total Recall
2013- The
Purge franchise, Gravity, World War Z, Elysium, Ender's Game
2014- Edge
of Tomorrow, Interstellar, The Maze Runnerfranchise, Divergent franchise
2015- Mad
Max, The Martian, The Revenant, Chappie, Tomorrowland
2016-
Arrival, Moonlight, The Girl with All the Gifts, 10 Cloverfield Lane, The Purge
Election Year
2017- Get
Out, The Shape of Water, Blade Runner 2049, It, Alien: Covenant, Bitch
(Netflix)
2018-
Annihilation, Overlord, Sorry to Bother You, [Rub & Tug--production on-hold
due to controversial casting, the issues surrounding this could be a book all
in itself]
2019- The
Kid Who Would be King
2020-
Wonder Woman 1984
Other
suggestions may include the rise in superhero films--the genre, hero tropes,
specific characters.
Please
submit 250-500 word abstracts with a brief bio to: ashley.carranza@csn.edu by
March 1, 2019. Abstracts may be delivered either as a Word attachment or in the
body of an email. Please do not share Google Docs when submitting your
proposal.
Ashley
Carranza, College of Southern Nevada in Las Vegas.
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