May 21st - 22nd 2020
The Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities, University of Edinburgh
Keynote Speaker: Prof Richard Dyer (King's College London)
This conference aims to examine how LGBTQ representation has changed
through time, continues to evolve in the present, and what role it might play
in the future. It draws on recent developments in queer on-screen
representation - ranging from the increased focus on transgender and queer of colour
protagonists in series such as Pose (2018, FX-), Transparent (2014-2019, Amazon
Prime), Vida (2018-, Starz) and Orange is the New Black (2013-2019, Netflix),
to depictions of queer characters in children’s programmes such as Cartoon
Network’s Steven Universe (2013-) - in order to trace how LGBTQ media comments
on both the current state of queer rights, as well as the possibility of queer
futurity (Edelman 2004; Muñoz 2009). At the same time, it builds on work done
on queer archives and histories (Cvetkovich 2003; Castiglia and Reed 2012; Dunn
2016; De Kosnik 2016) in order to question how queer lives were once
commemorated, how these memories live on, and how representation has changed
from then to now.
We invite presentations on queer art, film, television, and literature,
as well as social media and digital scholarship. The conference will work to
represent a multiplicity of queer experiences, spanning divergent historical
and geographical areas of representation, as well as the plurality of ideas of
what it means to identify as queer today, and what this identification might
look like in the future. We build here on work looking at the evolution of
LGBTQ representation in diverse contexts, as well as notions of transnational
queer representation (Schoonover and Galt 2016) and regionality (Yue 2014;
Chiang and Wong 2016). With our inclusive focus on transmedia representations
of queerness, we hope to examine narratives of sex, identity, politics, family
and gender across a broad range of contexts, mediums and artforms. We ask how
queer representation has changed, what versions of queerness we remember today,
and how that can manifest in our hopes or fears for the future. Through
investigating which narratives of queerness persist, and how representational
patterns have changed, we hope we may learn about creative spaces in which
queerness can thrive.
We invite abstracts dealing with different examples of LGBTQ
representation, as well as presentations which analyse the overall evolution of
queer representation in specific mediums and contexts.
Topics may include but
are not limited to:
- the evolution of queer on-screen representation in film, television, literature, gaming, etc.
- different regional and national representations of queerness
- the past, present and future of queer intersectionality
- representations of queer histories and memory
- queer adaptation
- queer representation in different countries and contexts
- different conceptualisations of what it means to represent queerness
- The evolutions of homonormativity and homonationalism
- queer futurity and the future of queer representation
Organisers: Dr Anamarija Horvat (anamarija.horvat@ed.ac.uk) and Dr Alice
Kelly (Alice.kelly@ed.ac.uk)
To submit an abstract (200-300 words), please contact us by March 20th
2020 at queerrep.conference@gmail.com. We offer a small amount of travel
bursaries to assist presenters who are students/unwaged/low-waged. If you would
like to be considered for these please indicate so when submitting an abstract.
The conference will take place in the Old College at the University of Edinburgh, which is fully accessible.
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