Call for papers
5-7 September 2012
Salford University
Imagining Communities Musically: Puttting Popular Music in its Place
Albion … Chocolate City … Highway 61 … Route 66 … Wonderland … Strawberry Fields … the Crossroads … Beale Street … Haight Ashbury … Music City U.S.A.
Popular music has always been affiliated with physical places, both literal and imaginary. It is one of the ways that the inhabitants of those locations define both their residence and themselves. To borrow the components of the title of Benedict Anderson’s widely read book, one of the most telling ways communities imagine themselves is acoustically. An indissoluble connection exists between musical expression and geography, both the landscape of actual locale and that conjured up by the mind. The persistent academic interest in the notion of scenes reflects this set of circumstances. So too does the research that examines how the state defines itself sonically and, in some cases, pursues its objectives with the assistance of acoustic apparatus, as in the torture of prisoners by a barrage of undesired sound. In addition, there are those composers, performers, compositions and performance practices that are thought to be quintessential expressions of states, peoples or defined populations.
This conference, whose subtitle is in homage to the work of the late Charles Hamm, intends to examine this set of propositions across any possible array of musical forms, cultural practices, physical locations and imagined environments. It wishes to interrogate the ways in which geography and musicology can be affiliated. Those “imagined communities” can include those that form specifically about music (fan bases, subcultures, on-line communities) as well as those that form through the formal elements of compositions (the use of “we” or “us” in lyrical constructions or the composition of anthems). Examples for study will, we hope, be drawn across an array of media as well, so that the use of media not only in live and recorded performance but also in any other particular media – film, radio, television, digital space – can be considered. It is hoped as well that while the invited speakers and plenary members may well address Anglo-American circumstances, the presentations will consider any and all portions of the globe as well as the digital ether.
Keynote Speaker: Rob Young, author of Electric Eden: Unearthing Britain’s Visionary Music (Faber, 2010)
Proposals should include the name, institution and contact details (email) of the proposer, the title of the proposal and an abstract of no more than 150 words. Individual presentations should be for 20 minute papers, while proposals can also be considered for 90 minute panels of affiliated speakers. Proposals will be welcomed from any academic perspective and addressing any kind of music. They can consider the proposed theme or any other related issue of popular music debate.
Please send proposals to George McKay: G.A.McKay@salford.ac.uk
All participants whose proposals are accepted must be members of IASPM.
Deadline for proposals: March 15, 2012
Conference website: http://www.smmp.salford.ac.uk/page/iaspm-2012