This FREE conference, organised by the AHRC Connected Communities programme, seeks to explore an important but neglected aspect of
public culture and community construction: street music. It aims to draw
together the new knowledge and practice generated by funded research projects
across Connected Communities with work across a number of academic disciplines
as well as the creative sector. Following Connected Communities established
practice, the conference seeks to function as a place for dialogue between
academics, independent researchers, musicians, performers, and the arts and
cultural policy sectors.
From brass bands to buskers to ballad singers, organ
grinders to beatboxing, one-man/-person bands to flash mobs, music has long
played a role in how we experience the public space of the street. In this
conference we aim to contribute to the growing discourse around the role of
street music in our contemporary communities and to understand its historical
significance. We welcome contributions from researchers, of course, and also
street musicians, performers, campaigners, arts producers and cultural workers.
(We recognise that these categories may be productively fluid.) Disciplines?
Music, but also from cultural and media studies, performance studies, cultural
geography, history, leisure and tourism studies, urban planning and
architecture, and more, as well as those who may work in inter-disciplinary or
indeed ill-disciplinary ways.
Areas for discussion and critical or creative exploration
include but are not limited to:
- Cultural policy and legislation
- Cultural control and cultural regeneration
- Critical and theoretical perspectives
- Repertoire and instrumentation
- Amplification, instrumental modification and technology
- Alternative networks and practices—of economy, of cultural production
- Case studies
- Performance locations and situations
- Public or everyday culture
- Historical perspectives on and cultural representations of street music.
This conference is being organised as part of the Creative
Spaces and Public Culture project at UEA, funded by Connected Communities.
Proposals of 250-300 words are invited for
presentations/interventions of 20 minutes, panel discussions, creative and
musical contributions.
These should be sent as a Word attachment to m.bagnall@uea.ac.uk and include the
following: title, presenter(s), affiliation(s), short biography (100 words),
and email address for contact.
The deadline for submission is March 12, 2019.
Further information:
The conference is free although registration is essential.
Registration will open on March 19, 2019.
The conference will take place on 14-15 May, 2019 at The
Forum, Norwich. There will be an evening event and meal provided for conference
delegates on 14 May. We can provide conference speakers with accommodation for
one to two nights. Please state on your application the dates that you require
accommodation. Reasonable travel expenses can also be claimed from the
Connected Communities programme.
Limited bursaries are available to support community
partners (e.g. musicians, performers, creative sector workers), caregivers
accompanying attendees, and ECR/PhD attendance. If you would like to apply for
a bursary please contact m.bagnall@uea.ac.uk for details.
Deadline for bursary applications is 16 March.
Please also indicate the nights that you would require accommodation.
For further information about the conference m.bagnall@uea.ac.uk or
checkconnected-communities.org for
regular updates.
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