The Screen Cultures Graduate Student Conference
Department of Radio/Television/Film, Northwestern University
September 27 & 28, 2019
Fuller House, Twin Peaks, Spiderman, Roseanne, The Twilight Zone, Tomb
Raider. Our popular film and television landscape is inundated with those media
properties now popularly known as reboots. Whether the proliferation of reboots
constitutes a true revival, giving new life to old texts, or an aesthetic
emergency signaling the end of originality, it prompts us to ask what the
notion of the reboot has to offer in considering the relationship between
present and past. Backward Glances, Northwestern’s biennial graduate student
media and historiography conference, invites submissions addressing the theme
of “reboot” in all its many valences.
A reboot may mean a restart or a reinvention. It can involve
rearticulating a previously existing topic, recreating a pre-existing work, or
revisiting a long-forgotten idea. It may be a reimagining of something we think
we understand, or a re-dissemination of a message that older generations have
heard and that newer ones have yet to receive. A reboot may be a renewal, but in
the age of endless remakes, the utility and cultural work of the reboot must be
called into question. What does the rebooted text reveal about its past and
present context? Does our theory need a reboot as much as our childhood
favorites?
Like so many neologisms, “reboot” comes to us from the world of
computing. An electronic system is “booted up” when the hardware is switched on
and ready for use, and we reboot our tech when our protocols glitch, when we
update our operating system, or we want a clean technological slate to get our
programs running smoothly. Media theorists have often revisited technology as
model and metaphor for gender, race, ability, and mechanisms of power. How
might the concept of the “reboot” help us understand not only aesthetic and
industrial cycles, but larger shifts in culture, politics, and power?
Further topics may include, but are not limited to:
- Remakes vs. Sequels vs. Reboots
- Casting and labor
- Memory and nostalgia
- Cross- and transcultural remakes
- The social, political, and cultural implications of reinvention
- The history of reboots
- Authorship and fandom
- Zombie media and hacking
- Reimagining genres and aesthetics
- Cultural and political cycles
- Intertextuality/paratextuality/multiplatform storytelling
- Franchises
- Racial difference, racialized identity, and racism in remakes
- Multigenerational viewing
- Remixing and reappropriation
We invite scholarship from across disciplines and methodologies,
backward-, forward-, and present-facing. Please send an abstract of up to 300
words and a bio of up to 100 words to backwardglancesconference@gmail.com by
June 15, 2019.
Participants will be notified by mid-July.
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