Researching Subcultures and Aesthetics Postgraduate
Symposium: Alternative Voices in Academia
10 September 2019
National University of Ireland, Galway
Keynotes by representatives of the Punk Scholars Network
Punk Scholars Network invites proposals for presentations as
part of our postgraduate symposium on subcultures and aesthetics at National
University of Ireland, Galway. This symposium will explore how subcultures
connect to aesthetics and createwhat Pierre Bourdieu calls the space of
possibles, a space for radical politics to be formed through the means of
artistic productions. From do-it-yourself methods of street art to the
shock-effect of Dadaist and punk attitudes in different time-places, the close
relationship between subcultures and aesthetics continues to reflect the
turbulences of our political atmosphere. From music and literatureto cinema and
other art forms, this symposium will offer a platform for postgraduate students
who wish to share their research, explore critical approaches and analyse the
complexities of the relationship between subcultures and aesthetics.
This is also a great opportunity for those of you who would
like to bring academic research and subcultural environments together, share
the potential contradictions that may arise from this togetherness and explore
alternative research methods. Representatives of the Punk Scholars Network have
kindly agreed to attend the symposium as panel discussants.
We invite proposals from international researchers
representing diverse backgrounds and academic disciplines, including urban
studies, cultural studies, media studies, literary studies, film studies, queer
studies, musicology, sociology, arts and history. We also welcome proposals of
alternative forms of presentation or performance relating to the symposium’s
themes.
Topics of interest for submission include but are not
limited to:
- Global and local subcultural scenes
- The role of subcultures in cultural studies
- Critical perspectives on subcultural productions
- Music scenes, art collectives, film clubs and other collective spaces
- Low-budget, DIY and alternative forms of art-making
- The current state of punk discourse in academia
- Histories of subcultures, nostalgia and collective memory
- Punk as a discipline / Punk as a subculture
- The politics of race and gender in subcultural environments
- Junk and pulp fiction, thrash, cult, experimental and underground cinemas
Proposals for papers should be approximately 300 words in
length and should be sent to t.gurbuz1@nuigalway.ie no later than 1 July 2019 with a
short biography.
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