Detecting Europe in contemporary crime narratives:
print fiction, film, and television
21-23
June 2021
Via
del Casale di San Pio V 44 – Rome
Among the different expressions of popular culture, no
other genre more than crime – meant as a composite made up of many different
variants or subgenres -- has proved able to travel and expand its reach into
international markets and with audiences. Nor has any other genre been more
adept at laying bare the conflicts and contradictions – social, political and historical
– that characterise contemporary European societies. The Detecting Europe
conference offers an open forum to explore and discuss how narratives of crime
and investigation, as well as their production and reception, have helped
define the major industrial, commercial, thematic and stylistic trends of
European popular culture since 1989, fostering both the transnational
circulation of its products and the appearance of new transcultural
representations in line with the emergence of new social identities. We welcome
proposals that interrogate the notion of Europeanness as a critical category,
and its viability for the study of contemporary popular culture, both in print
and screen media. We wish to explore both the scope and limits of the
interrelated notions of transnational identity and cosmopolitanism when applied
to the works of European crime fiction, including print fiction, film, and TV.
A few general — but not exclusive — questions may be
asked. Are we to conceive of cosmopolitanism and the process of European
transculturation merely as unifying factors, fostering the generation of a
shared and uniform transnational identity? Or should we better acknowledge the
existence of a variety of European transcultural identities, expressed in
different writing and audio-visual styles, characteristic narrative models,
place-specific production cultures and distribution and consumption patterns?
What is the impact of national media ecologies in shaping the idea of the
European, and how the national translate the European when foreign products
appear in its mediascape? Should hybridization and transculturation be assumed
as markers and powerful drivers of cultural homologation? Or rather the
opposite is true, namely that cultural hybridization entails a growing
differentiation of narrative forms and styles, contents and formats, production
and reception practices, thus contributing to the emergence of a post-national
assemblage of multiple and possibly diverging cosmopolitan identities? We deem
it important, at this particular time, that the notion of Europeanness and its
eventual instantiations in contemporary crime narratives is approached having
in mind the multiple crises that are currently affecting the continent and its
population.
We invite proposals from multiple fields of cultural
studies, including representation studies, industry and production studies, and
reception and audience studies. Possible topics may include, but are not
limited to, the following:
- Main stylistic trends of the crime-genre works produced in Europe in the last 30 years.
- Debating/reframing Euronoir as a critical category for cultural studies.
- Hybridization and transculturation: toward homologation or increased cultural differentiation?
- Crime fiction and the European crisis: immigration, migrant labour, Brexit, and the rise of right-wing popularism.
- The restaging and critical analysis of Europe’s recent past in the work of crime writers, screenwriters and directors.
- Images of Europe and Europeans: investigating social change through the study of popular crime narratives.
- Restating vs challenging class, gender and ethnic stereotypes, prejudices and discrimination in the representation of crime.
- The multiple facets of European diversity: how have social, spatial and historical identities been expressed in the works of the European crime genre?
- Ecocriticism and environmental humanities in the era of widescale ecological crisis: eco-noir and the challenges to European environment policies.
- The profiled position of crime in fostering transnational cooperation in the European cultural and creative sectors.
- Relationships and discrepancies between national/local creative industries and transnational cultural policies in the production milieu of the European crime genre.
- Transnational production and distribution and the emergence of transcultural formats.
- The hopes and limits of European cohesiveness, as revealed in practices of co-production and distribution of crime novels, films and TV dramas across the continent.
- Crime narratives and the media discourse on organized trans-European crime.
- Fictional representations of legal and forensic practices in comparative perspective.
- Translation, dubbing, subtitling as strategies for cultural adaptation and appropriation.
- The imbrication of local, national and transnational identities in the reception of foreign crime stories, between old and fresh perspectives on proximate or distant neighbors.
- Transnational distribution and the role of audiences in shaping the circulation patterns of European crime narratives across the continent.
- Detecting transcultural identity and social change through the study of the audiences’ response to crime stories and trans/cross-media universes.
- Engagement and design of crime audiences in the age of digital markets and online distribution.
- Making sense of social change through the audience’s response to the representation of female, gay, lesbian and queer characters.
- Theorising transnational/transdisciplinary research for the study of European crime narratives in print and screen media.
Deadlines and practicalities
Abstracts deadline: 15 November 2020
Feedback: 15 December 2020
Registration deadline: 31 January 2020
Regular conference fee: €120
Reduced conference fee (PhD students, Postdoctoral
researchers): €90
Further information: info@detect-project.eu
Submissions guidelines
Submissions are welcome as individual papers (max. 20
minutes) and pre-constituted panels (3/4 papers).
Individual presenters are required to provide their
name, email address, the title of the paper, an abstract (max. 300 words),
references (max. 200 words), and a short bio (max. 150 words).
Submit your paper proposal here.
Submit your panel proposal here (panel organizers are also asked
to submit a panel title and a short description of the panel (max. 300 words).
The conference is supported by CUC – Consulta Universitaria del Cinema, Italy.
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