Digging the Seam
Cultural Reflections and the Consequences of the 1984/5 Miners' Strike -
Conference 25-27th March 2010.
Papers, panels, screenings, performances and exhibition materials are invited
for a conference to be held at the University of Leeds on March 25-27, 2010,
following the successful BBC/AHRC project on the miners strike and media
coverage, led by Simon Popple.
The conference is organised by The Louis Le Prince Centre for Photography,
Film & Television (LLP) and the Media Industries Research Centre (MIRC) at the
Institute of Communications Studies (ICS), University of Leeds.
Introduction and Themes
March 2010 marks the 25th anniversary of the end of one of the bitterest
industrial disputes in living memory, the 1984/5 miners’ strike. The social and
political consequences of this dispute, which have resonated for the past
quarter century, have been subject to detailed analysis and reflection. The
consequences for the arts and popular culture are less clearly mapped. This
conference intends to explore the broad cultural legacy of the strike and to
focus on two key strands.
The first will examine cultural representations of the strike and broader mining
culture through popular forms such as literature, music, dance, theatre,
performance, radio, photography, television and cinema. It will examine how
popular culture has recorded and represented the strike and its associated
cultures in the intervening 25 years as well as its role in the preservation of
particular traditions and practices in a new ‘post industrial’ society.
The second will examine the relationship between the strike and cultural
production. How did cultural producers in forms such as music, theatre and
cinema respond to the strike? Which kinds of producers showed what kinds of
solidarities with the miners and how effective were they? How have cultural
producers actively constructed meanings of the strike in the intervening
years? Arguably, the defeat of the miners hastened the onset of various forms
of policy, aimed at regenerating ‘post-industrial’ communities through
information and cultural industries. To what extent have there been useful
policy interventions, cultural and otherwise, in mining communities?
This anniversary provides a perfect opportunity to reflect on these issues and
to explore the role of culture and the cultural industries within this important
context.
Suggested themes
Possible strands and contributions could include:
Culture and Industrial identity/Political theatre/ Folk traditions/ Music and the
cultural impact of the strike/New documentary traditions in film and
photography/Cultural re-orientation and the strike/ Arts therapy and
reconciliation/Storytelling and testimony/ Cultural industries as new
employers? /Digital resources and the strike/Archives and the re-constructions
of cultural memory/ The impact of the strike on media cultures/The political
novel/ Poetry and protest/ Culture as memory.
We are also seeking proposals for screenings, performance, and art works for
exhibition.
Proposal deadline: abstracts (250 words max) should be sent, by 1st
December 2009, to the organising committee at:
Email: [log in to unmask]
Or mail to: Dr Eleri Pound, Digging the Seam Conference, Institute of
Communications Studies, 16 Clarendon Place, The University of Leeds, Leeds,
LS2 9JT, UK
Informal enquiries and suggestions for panels to Ian Macdonald, at
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