Calls for
Papers
GREEK CINEMA: TEXTS, HISTORIES, IDENTITIES
Liverpool, 23rd May 2008
A one-day conference organised by
Dr Lydia Papadimitriou, Screen Studies (Liverpool John
Moores University) and Dr Yannis Tzioumakis, Media and
Communication Studies (The University of Liverpool)
Greek
Cinema: Texts, Histories, Identities
is an international conference that will bring together
papers on a wide range of topics dealing with Greek cinema,
representing the work of new and established researchers in
the field. Greek cinema is a relatively new field of
academic study, both within and, especially, beyond Greece.
This conference aims to consolidate the field of inquiry as
it stands at present, and prepare the ground for dynamic
work in the future. It will address a number of critically
important aspects of Greek cinema, in the varying contexts
of nation, the Balkans and the concept of the “periphery”.
The conference invites papers from a variety of
methodological approaches, from history to theory, from text
to context, from genre to auteur.
The
conference Greek Cinema: Texts, Histories, Identities
is planned to coincide with the launch of the Centre for
Research on Greek Cinema (CRGC), a collaboration between two
leading Liverpool Universities, that aims to promote the
research and study of Greek cinema, to enable debate on the
history and analysis of Greek films and to create links
between researchers of Greek cinema. The conference is
intended as one of the centre’s platforms for the exchange
of ideas and the dissemination of material pertaining to the
study of Greek cinema as a social phenomenon and aesthetic
experience. Papers submitted for the Conference proceedings
will be considered for publication.
Keynote
papers will be presented by Professor Maria Stassinopoulou
(University of Vienna), Professor Lizianna Delveroudi
(University of Crete) and Dr Dimitris Eleftheriotis
(University of Glasgow).
We invite
papers on a wide range of topics pertaining to Greek cinema.
These will include, but are not limited to:
old/new/contemporary Greek cinema
-
genres
-
auteurs
-
gender
-
politics
-
archives
-
audiences
-
historiography
Please send a
300 word abstract of your proposed paper to
Yannis
Tzioumakis (y.tzioumakis@liverpool.ac.uk)
and
Lydia
Papadimitriou (l.papadimitriou@ljmu.ac.uk)
by the 22nd
February 2008.
Reflecting on Gender and Identity
in
Modern/Contemporary Greece
(One-day Graduate Conference)
Conveners:
Eirini Kotsovili (DPhil student, University of Oxford),
Nikolaos Papadogiannis (PhD student, University of
Cambridge).
Date and
venue:
September or early October, 2008, either in Cambridge or in
Oxford.
In the recent
decades, the domain of gender has been attracting attention
in the academic world, especially within the field of
humanities. Whereas the study of gender is beginning to
weigh in the analysis of topics related to the Greek
identity in modern/contemporary times (broadly understood
from the early 19th century until present), to
this day the amount of academic production remains somewhat
modest.
This
conference aims to contribute to the
research conducted on gender. Graduate students
(MA, MPhil, DPhil/PhD),
who work on the broad field of humanities and social
sciences
(history, literature, linguistics, social/cultural
anthropology, political science, sociology, psychology,
history of art, media studies)
and who are affiliated to a British university are
encouraged to submit papers, which engage, but are not
limited to, the following key aspects from the perspective
of gender:
-
Subject
positions / representations in Modern/Contemporary Greek
Literature.
-
State:
Gender divisions in state institutions. Discussion of
gendered identities and bio-politics (especially the
regulation of the population and the forging of the
concept of “motherhood” and “fatherhood”).
-
Protest
movements: Gendered subject positions in movements of
protest. The impact of feminist, as well as of
gay/lesbian liberation movements.
-
Production / circulation of goods / consumption: Gender
relations and construction of gender identities in the
workforce (i.e. production, commerce and civil
services). Emergence of mass consumption and its impact
on gender.
-
Movements
of population: The impact of urbanization, migration and
relocation on gender identities.
-
Sexuality: shifts on values and norms (i.e. perception
of masculinity, femininity. The conceptualization of
‘honor’ as an emotional regime regulating the
prevailing/dominant model of gender relations)
In this
conference, gender is perceived as a concept constituted by
social and cultural practices, entailing a variety of
different forms of masculinity and femininity. Drawing from
recent works, such as the domain of colonial/ post-colonial
studies, gender is conceived as a field of identification,
which intersects with class, race, but also with age
identities. Gender representations in different contexts
need to be sought. As such, applications from researchers
working on different ethnic and national communities living
in Greece (i.e. Muslim and Jewish) are highly encouraged;
moreover, presentations on gender relations in rural
settings- particularly missing in the academic research of
modern and contemporary Greece- are welcomed. Finally, it is
expected that this conference is not going to reproduce a
purely national historiography. Thus, papers examining
gender relations in movements of population, from and to
Greece, as well as the impact of transnational cultural
flows-such as advertisements, music and cinema genres- on
gender identities in the settings of Greece, are strongly
encouraged. Concomitantly, it is important to emphasize that
any comparative study that covers the aforementioned
fields is more than welcomed, should it entail research into
modern and contemporary Greece as well as other
case-studies.
This
conference, aims to attract papers from all fields of the
humanities and social sciences. In order to make the
exchange of ideas even more beneficial, the participants are
strongly encouraged to devote part of their presentation in
the analysis of the theoretical and methodological tools
they use.
The
organization of such a conference is anticipated to help
deepen and broaden the research on modern and contemporary
Greece for the aforementioned reasons. Besides that, the
multidisciplinary character of the conference, as well as
the reflection over concepts whose importance is not limited
in the analysis of modern and contemporary Greece, may
render it attractive for researchers interested in gender,
but who work on case-studies other than that of Greece. The
latter are warmly invited to participate in the discussions,
which will follow the presentations of the papers.
Deadlines:
Interested graduate students are encouraged to inform the
conveners as soon as possible, in order to allow the
determination of the exact venue and time, which shall be
convenient for the majority of the applicants. Short
abstracts should be sent by early June, 2008. Participants
should expect to be reimbursed for their travel costs,
namely either train or bus tickets for travels within the
UK. Please contact either Eirini Kotsovili (eirini.kotsovili@stx.ox.ac.uk)
or Nikos Papadogiannis (np308@cam.ac.uk).