Off the Radar: Periodical Print Media Outside Mainstream Culture, 1800 –
Today
Postgraduate Conference in Comparative Literature and Culture
[Abseitiges: Magazine und Zeitungen außerhalb des Mainstreams, 1800 –
heute Komparatistische Nachwuchstagung]
July 24-25, 2020 at Goettingen University, Germany
Conference languages: English, German
This interdisciplinary conference is dedicated to periodical print media
(newspapers, magazines, zines) that thrive(d) outside the ‘mainstream,’ i.e.,
that are not backed by big publishers and/or geared towards a commercially
defined majority in terms of taste, politics, and language. We invite advanced
graduate students, PhD students, and postdocs/ECRs to consider periodicals as
‘autonomous objects of study’ and seek discussions of new aspects in
well-researched genres like little magazines together with papers on hitherto
neglected titles.
Periodicals are low-threshold media that lend themselves to grass-roots
activism and avant-garde experimentation: from the lifting of stamp duties in
19th-century Britain to advances in printing technology and the introduction of
desktop publishing software in the 20th century on a global scale, they are
widely available to communicate, experiment, agitate, and represent diverse
voices and communities. The conference considers periodicals that are, in one
way or another, off the radar of a widespread audience and cater to more select
readerships as ‘alternative,’ ‘underground,’ ‘radical,’ ‘niche,’ ‘diasporic,’
‘minority,’ ‘avant-garde,’ ‘pulp,’ ‘independent,’ or ‘subcultural’ media. We
expressly do not limit inquiries to North America and Europe.
To enable an understanding of these print media landscapes in specific
historical moments in their constellations of mainstream and
periphery/avant-garde, we seek papers addressing not only single issues, but
also entire runs, contexts, networks, infrastructures, seriality, materiality,
and other aspects. The procedural development of print media and a changing
understanding of what constitutes the realm ‘outside the mainstream’ (and how
these print media participate(d) in a broader, ongoing cultural discussion) are
aspects to consider: We are, for example, interested in 19th and early 20th
century developments of chartist, spiritualist, indigenous, revolutionary,
suffragette, and abolitionist periodicals, the little magazines of modernism,
the first fanzines and pulp magazines of the 30s and 40s, the alternative and
underground press of the (mid-)20th-century, the style press of the late 20th
century, and the current boom of indie magazines. In short: the constellation
of newspapers and magazines finding readers outside the mainstream,
economically, aesthetically, or ideologically— and depending on how the
mainstream press is defined—from 1800 to today.
Topics may include but are not limited to
- The politics of the (digital) archive
- Histories of specific periodicals
- Censorship
- Questions of terminology: ‘alternative,’ ‘independent,’ ‘little,’ ‘underground,’ ‘mainstream,’ ‘pulp’ as applicable to periodicals
- The periodicals of subcultures/scenes/neo-tribes
- (Fan)zines
- Dissident periodicals
- Scrapbooking/repurposing/recycling
- Independent magazines today and authenticity
- Feminist and gay periodicals
- Ethnic and indigenous periodicals
- Periodicals of diaspora communities
- Avant-garde networks through and aesthetic experiments with periodicals
- Periodicals in minority languages
- Specialist periodicals with small readerships
Please send abstracts of no more than 300 words and a short bio note in
English or German to sabina.fazli@phil.uni-goettingen.de and frnewton@uni-mainz.de by January
31, 2020.
We especially encourage advanced graduate students, PhD students, and
ECR to apply.
Pending approval, accommodation and travel expenses will be partly
covered.
Please note that we will take until February 29, 2020 to review the
proposals.
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