Saturday, August 10, 2024

CFP PopCRN 1950s in Popular Culture Conference (1/31/2025; online 3/28-29/2025)

History and Nostalgia: The 1950s in popular culture


deadline for submissions:
January 31, 2025

full name / name of organization:
PopCRN - the Popular Culture Research Network

contact email:
PopCRN@une.edu.au

source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2023/10/04/history-and-nostalgia-the-1950s-in-popular-culture


PopCRN (the Popular Culture Network) will be holding a free virtual symposium exploring the 1950s in popular culture. Held online on Thursday 28th and Friday 29th of March 2025.

The 1950s was the decade where the world began to recover from the tragedy of the Second World War. This conference aims to explore both the popular culture of the 1950s, and how the 1950s have been depicted in the popular culture of other eras.

The 1950s was the era of the teenager, the atomic bomb, the space race, the Queen’s coronation, the Cuban revolution, the Korean War, the French Fifth republic, Lego, colour television, the Montgomery Bus boycott, the finding of DNA, the founding of McDonalds, Rock n roll, jukeboxes, the Melbourne Olympics, Poodle Skirts, I love Lucy, birth of the credit card, Dr Seuss, James Bond’s Casino Royale, Disneyland opens, Sidney Poitier wins an Oscar, The Day the Music Died, 3D cinematography, Marilyn Monroe, The Twilight Zone, Jackson Pollock, Teddy Boys, Dior’s New Look, Formula One racing begins, McCarthyism, Science Fiction, the Munich air crash, the SS Andrea Doria, Ten Pound Poms, Hungarian Uprising, Univac – the first business computer, Paul McCartney meets John Lennon, the Xerox machine, death of Stalin, Hillary and Norgay climb Mount Everest, the Polio vaccine, the Warsaw Pact, Suez Crisis, introduction of transatlantic jetliners, China’s Giant Leap, the European Economic Community, the Malayan Emergency, the Algerian War, the Eurovision Song Contest, Peanuts comic strip, Fahrenheit 451, The Lord of the Flies, the Chevrolet Corvette, Barbie, Super Glue, Power Steering, first Video Tape Recorder, first Diet soft drinks, the Black Box, invention of Liquid Paper, the first computer game – Tennis for Two, and TV dinners to name just a few.

We welcome papers from researchers across the academic spectrum and encourage papers from postgraduate researchers and early career researchers. Papers from this conference will have the opportunity to be published.

To whet your appetite, we have provided some topics below. We will also accept topics beyond this scope:

  • “I can't imagine there has ever been a more gratifying time or place to be alive than America in the 1950s. No country had ever known such prosperity.” – 1950s America in popular culture.
  • “Some people would like the world to go back to the 1950s.” – Retromania and subcultur
  • “In 1955, when I'd write a science-fiction novel, I'd set it in the year 2000. I realised around 1977 that, 'My God, it's getting exactly like those novels we used to write in the 1950s!' Everything's just turning out to be real.” – Science fiction of the 1950s
  • “My law school class in the late 1950s numbered over 500. That class included less than 10 women.” – Women’s careers as depicted in 1950s films
  • “But let's just say, I'm Irish. I grew up in the 1950s. Religion had a very tight iron fist.” – Associations of religion and the 1950s in popular culture.
  • "Whoever you are, I have always depended on the kindness of strangers." – Neighbours, community and culture in the 1950s.
  • We're gonna rock, gonna rock, around the clock tonight – The rock ‘n’ roll phenomenon.
  • “You can't just walk out of a drive-in.” – Leisure activities of the 1950s
  • “A revolution is not a bed of roses. A revolution is a struggle between the future and the past.” – Communism, socialism and capitalism of the 1950s in popular culture.
  • “I could have gone on flying through space forever” – How the space race captured the public imagination.
  • “I knew someone had to take the first step and I made up my mind not to move.” – Remembering racism and protest in the 1950s.
  • “Ban the Bomb” - Nuclear weapons in popular culture
  • "[Franklin] came very much closer to the discovery of the double helix than she has usually been credited with doing." – science, gender and women.
  • “The second thing was they just wanted to lay a few fists and see a fair bit of Russian blood in the pool. And that's what happened. – Sport as a battleground for Cold War politics

Please email abstracts (200 words) to popcrn@une.edu.au by 31st January 2025. Please include your name, affiliation, email address, title of paper, orcid ID (where available), google scholar link (where available) and a short biography (100 words). Registration is free.

Last updated August 4, 2024

Friday, August 9, 2024

CFP PopCRN Bridgerton Conference (9/30/2024; online 1/30/2025)

“Love Conquers All”: Exploring the Popular Culture Phenomenon of Bridgerton


deadline for submissions:
September 30, 2024

full name / name of organization:
PopCRN - the Popular Culture Research Network

contact email:
popcrn@une.edu.au

source: https://call-for-papers.sas.upenn.edu/cfp/2024/05/21/%E2%80%9Clove-conquers-all%E2%80%9D-exploring-the-popular-culture-phenomenon-of-bridgerton


PopCRN (the Popular Culture Network) will be holding a free virtual conference exploring all things Bridgerton to be held online on Thursday 30th January 2025.

From a popular book series to the Netflix phenomenon, Bridgerton has captured the public imagination, courted scandal and dazzled readers and audiences with a glittering reimagining of regency London.

We welcome papers from researchers across the academic spectrum and encourage papers from postgraduate researchers and early career researchers. We welcome individual papers, panels and round table submissions. Papers from this conference will have the opportunity to be in our sister journal The International Journal of Popular Culture Studies.

To whet your appetite, we have provided some topics below. We will also accept topics beyond this scope:

  • “Dearest Gentle Reader” - Tensions between the written and filmed versions.
  • “Diamond of the First Water” – Standing out in the marriage market.
  • "It is not a man's appearance or title that will woo you. It is his mind and spirit that will court yours." – love and economic realities.
  • "What's happening out there cannot be as important as what's happening down here." – Sex and sexuality in Bridgerton.
  • "A diamond is precious precisely because it is rare." - Conspicuous consumption in the regency period.
  • "You are the bane of my existence and the object of all my desires." Passionate declarations of love and desire in the romance novel.
  • “My garden is in bloom” – the recurring motif of flowers in the Bridgerton series.
  • “I thought you wanted food," she gasped. "I do," he murmured, tugging on the bodice of her dress. "But I want you more.” – The food and drink of the Bridgerton world.
  • “She hated me.” “Impossible, you were perfect.” – Embracing disability and bodies of difference in Bridgerton.
  • "Why must our only options be to squawk and settle or to never leave the nest? What if I want to fly?" – Feminism, Freedom and Family
  • “I risk my life everyday for love. You have no idea what it is like to be in a room with someone you cannot live without and yet still feel as though you are oceans apart." – Queering Bridgerton
  • And it is not far enough! Do you think that there is a corner of this Earth that you could travel to far away enough to free me from this torment? ­– Carriages, boats and balloons; travel in the Bridgerton universe
  • “Sorrows. Sorrows. Prayers” – Negotiating grief and loss in a romance world.
  • “You must promise me that when you step into the light you will be worthy of the attention you command.” – Glow-ups, transformations and make-overs in Bridgerton.
  • "I must confess, I have felt more chemistry when being fitted at the modiste." – Fantastical fashions and the women who wear them.
  • "Straight into the fire, a favorite pastime of mine." – Scandal and intrigue in the Regency world.
  • "We are not all guaranteed a fairy-tale ending." – Romance and the realities of a patriarchal society
  • "Edmund was the air that I breathed. And now there is no air." – Love and loss in the Bridgerton series.
  • “I care not for his sanity. I care for his happiness. I care for his soul.” – Managing psychiatric illness in the Bridgerton World
  • "I do not fear change. I embrace it." – Transforming the social politics of the Regency period in the television show.
  • "I have loved. I have lost. I have earned the right to do whatever I please, whenever I please, and however I please to do it." – Dowagers, Queens and Widows; the older women of Bridgerton.
  • “We were two separate societies divided by color until a king fell in love with one of us” – Reimagining race relations in the regency era.
  • “You do realise what tune she was playing just now, don't you? Mozart's 'Funeral March' – The music of Bridgerton
  • "Your eyes, are the most remarkable shade of blue. Yet, somehow, they shine even brighter when you are kind." - The poetry of romantic love.
  • "Well, for what it is worth, sometimes a fire is slow to burn." – The genesis of romance stories in Bridgerton.

Please email abstracts (200 words) to popcrn@une.edu.au by 30th September 2024.

Please submit your abstract on a Word Document and save the paper as your name e.g. ErnestAcademic.docx.

Please include your name, affiliation, email address, title of paper, short biography, (100 words), Orcid ID (if available) and google scholar link (where available).

Registration is free – please email popcrn@une.edu.au to register.

Website: www.popcrn.org



Last updated August 4, 2024