Popular Music and Society invites article proposals for a special issue on Regional and
Rural Popular Music Scenes. There is now
an established body of literature on popular music scenes (see, for example,
Straw, "Systems of Articulation, Logics of Change: Scenes and Communities
in Popular Music"; Shank, Dissonant Identities; Bennett and Peterson,
Music Scenes: Local, Translocal and Virtual).
Significantly, however, this literature is heavily centered on the urban
metropolitan experience of music scenes or "music cities." While such work is clearly important in
understanding the cultural and economic importance of music, the dominance of
this metro-centric approach also serves to further detract attention from
regional and rural spaces and places, the latter also providing important
settings for the production, performance, and consumption of popular music
(Waitt and Gibson, "The Spiral Gallery: Non-Market Creativity and
Belonging in an Australian Country Town").
This special issue will bring together a series of papers that will
offer new insights regarding both the distinctive contributions made by regional
and rural music scenes in the contemporary world and their connections to
national and transnational networks of popular music production, performance,
and consumption.
We invite
papers with themes that may include, but are not limited to:
- Performers and performance (including touring in regional and rural areas)
- Venues and other performance spaces (festivals, street music, busking, etc.)
- Legislation and policy frameworks
- History and heritage
- Regional and rural music scenes and social identities (such as gender, age, disability, race)
- Participation, audiences, and access to music in regional and rural areas
- Travel, tourism, and leisure
- Representations of regional and rural music in film, television, and media
- Social media with respect to regional and rural music scenes
- Fan communities in regional and rural music scenes
Send
proposals of up to 500 words by 30 June 2018 to guest editor Natalie
Lewandowski at natalie.t.lewandowski@gmail.com.
Indicate the name under which you would wish to be published, your
professional/academic affiliations, a postal address, and preferred e-mail
contact. Proposals will be reviewed for
potential inclusion in the journal, with authors of selected papers being
informed by 15 August 2018.
Authors to
be included in the volume should expect to have their full, final manuscripts
prepared by 1 August 2019. These
submissions should be between 6,000 and 8,000 words (inclusive of everything)
and should use MLA style. All
affiliations, e-mails, and snail-mail contact information should be supplied in
the first submission; however, for purposes of blind peer-review, your name or
the names of your coauthors should not appear in the body of the
manuscript. All papers will be
peer-reviewed by at least two peers as well as the three guest editors of the
special issue. We are happy to receive
inquiries about prospective submissions.
Please send all queries to natalie.t.lewandowski@gmail.com. It is expected that the special issue will be
published in hard copy in October 2020 (with electronic publication occurring
earlier). For more information and
step-by-step publishing guidance, visit the journal's Author Services Support
page. For further information on the
journal, please visit Popular Music and Society.
Guest-edited
by Andy Bennett, David Cashman, and Natalie Lewandowski
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