Gender and Transnational TV conference
Liverpool 11-12 June 2020
This conference aims to forge interdisciplinary links between those
working in Television and Media Studies, Modern Languages and Gender Studies.
Television and media research is changing, the rapid evolution of this medium
has been theorised in terms of the technological advances that changing modes
of distribution bring, its textual, narrative and aesthetic developments, and
its role as a mediator of cultural identity.
Scholarship in this area has produced prolific studies of US and, to a
lesser degree, UK television to exemplify the ways in which constructions of
gender are mediated through different televisual formats and genres. This
conference will refocus this research through analysis of television made
beyond these English-speaking territories and consider the important work being
done in Modern Languages to understand and analyse the ways in which
transcultural and transnational mediations of gender are made visible, produced
and understood through popular television.
This conference aims to explore this cultural specificity that will
provide an important intervention into Gender Studies and Cultural Studies more
broadly, as it works at the interface of Area Studies and these other
disciplines. As a response to a global political landscape, in which power and
gender have been brought into sharp focus, it will examine the way in which
these structures of power play out in these ‘other’ television cultures. We
will consider television as a key cultural mediator in the transcultural
understanding of gender and a significant interlocutor in social change. If we
consider TV one of the most influential agents of value construction, then TV
shows can be considered a powerful tool to guide viewers through the moral
climate of their time, attesting to a collective process of working through
social issues.
Themes and research questions may include but should not be limited to:
- How is gender made visible on television?
- How are gendered subjectivities negotiated in different TV genres?
- How are gendered subjectivities framed by the format of the TV genre?
- To what extent is character engagement dependent on genre, hybridisation or actors?
- How do critics deal with gender on TV? What other extra textual discourses contribute to the production of meanings surrounding gender on television?
- To what extent is the continued application of Anglophone theory in a non-Anglophone context useful?
- Can the analysis of the geo-specific productions contribute to the theorisation of the media representation of gender?
- How does the reception of international productions compare to that of indigenous television?
- How has the transmedial configuration of television altered the ways in which configurations of gender and nationality are understood?
- How have streaming platforms changed the ways in which gender is mediated transnationally?
Conference Formats:
Individual papers: Oral presentations on original research by one or
more authors.
Full panels: Three thematically connected papers on original research by
several authors.
Posters: A0-size academic posters, which will be displayed during a
dedicated poster session. A digital version of the poster must be sent via
email 72 hours prior to the conference and submitted physically to the
registration desk on the morning of the conference.
All papers consist of a 20-minute presentation by the author(s), with an
extra 10-minute slot allocated for discussion at the end. Proposals for papers
should include an abstract under 350 words and a bio of no more than 100 words.
Panel proposals for three or four paper panels should combine the abstracts and
bios of speakers in one document, and should also include a short rationale and
panel title. Poster proposals should include an abstract of no more than 250
words and a 100-words speaker bio. All proposals should be submitted to the
organisers: a.louis@shu.ac.uk and abigail.loxham@liverpool.ac.uk
The deadline for proposals is 20 January 2020. Accepted papers will be
notified by 15 February 2020. Selected papers will be invited to submit for a
peer-reviewed volume.
Registration fees: £100 | Concessionary rate (postgraduates): £60
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