Critical Studies in Television Biennial Conference
26-28 August 2020
Ormskirk, UK
Where to, Television Studies? What directions are there to investigate?
What are the themes that are important as the medium morphs and changes? What
methodological challenges do these changes pose to Television Studies and what
place does television history continue to hold within our discipline?
This conference will be a space where we can come together to set the
agenda for television research and education. We therefore invite papers from
all disciplines that engage with television and want to contribute to
Television Studies as a field. We are particularly interested in papers that
offer analyses of the field(s) or methods and ask questions about what research
Television Studies should conduct and how we want to teach the subject.
We thus
invite papers that engage with any of the following or indeed other fields:
- Television as texts
- Television industries
- Television institutions
- Television histories
- Television audiences
- Television as a cultural form
- Television and convergence
- Television and identities
- Television business
- Television and its relation to the national, local and/or global
- Methodologies in Television Studies
- Teaching television
- Theoretical approaches to television
- Others
Two round-tables will provide insights into new directions of television
research and questions of disciplinarity and television research. In addition,
our keynote will examine television, its relation to technology and traditional
understandings of the medium.
Confirmed speakers:
Hanne Bruun is a Professor of Media Studies at Aarhus University,
Denmark. She is the founder and head of the Centre for Media Industries and
Production Studies; the author of four books, including Dansk tv-satire.
Underholdning med kant; and the co-editor of four books. She has contributed to
several books, e.g. Advancing Media Production Studies eds. Paterson, C. et
al., and journals, e.g. Nordic Journal of Media Studies (2019), Critical
Studies in Television, Nordicom Review, the European Journal of Communication
and Media, Culture & Society. Her most recent book is Re-Scheduling
Television in the Digital Era (2020).
Kerr Castle completed his PhD recently at the University of Glasgow
where he investigated the role of television as ‘comfort’ medium. He worked
with the NHS and has published several blogs on CSTOnline. He now works
for the QAA Scotland.
Christine Geraghty is Honorary Professorial Research Fellow at the
University of Glasgow, UK. Her research spans television and film, and she was
part of the early researchers looking into soap opera, the experience of which
she has documented in several publications. Her books include Women and
Soap Opera (1991) and Now a Major Motion Picture: Film Adaptations of
Literature and Drama (2008). She is currently researching race and casting.
Brett Mills is Professor for Film and Television at the University of
East Anglia, UK. His research has focused on the lesser-researched genres of
television including Television Sitcom (2008) and Invisible Television (2012).
More recently, he has focused on Animals on Television
(2017).
Abstract Submissions:
Please submit your abstracts for papers, panels, roundtables,
screenings, posters etc. to the following address:
CSTconference@edgehill.ac.uk.
Paper proposals (including for visual essays) should include a title,
your name and affiliation as well as a short biography, and an abstract of less
than 500 words.
Panels should include an overall abstract, as well as paper abstracts
and the names, affiliations and biographies of all panellists.
Roundtables should include an overall abstract, as well as the names,
affiliations and biographies of all contributors.
Screenings should include a title, abstract of the film/ programme as
well as names, affiliations and biographies of the main contributors.
Deadline for submission of abstracts is: 28 February 2020.
Successful applicants will be notified by 27 March 2020.
Projected Costs:
We will make several registration fees available, but projected costs
for the three-day registration are:
Early bird: £195
Early bird concession: £120
Full registration: £245
Full registration concession: £155
On Campus Accommodation including breakfast will be approx. £55/ per
night.
For any questions, please don’t hesitate to contact us at
CSTconference@edgehill.ac.uk or Elke directly: weissmae@edghill.ac.uk.
The conference is organised by Critical Studies in Television, ECREA
Television Studies and the Department of Media and Performing Arts, Edge Hill University.
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