________________________________________
From: Association for Cultural Studies [[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Martin Lussier [[log in to unmask]]
Sent: Thursday, October 14, 2010 5:55 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: [ACS] CFP - Music & Environment: Place, Context, Conjuncture (Montréal 2011)
Is it possible to circulate this to your members through your email list?
For your information. Sorry for the cross-posting.
Thanks a lot
Martin
******
Music and Environment: Place, Context, Conjuncture
IASPM-Canada Annual Conference
Schulich School of Music, McGill University, Montreal
June 16-19 2011
Music functions as an agent for different types of environmental transformations whether they be social, economic or technological, with the reverse also being true: environmental changes can be heard in the music and sounds of our day. In recent academic discourse we have observed a turn towards the ecology of sound, which can imply political advocacy of the preservation of an environment's sonority. In a parallel gesture, use has been made of the environment in many artistic forums, such as sound sculptures and installations. This recent turn has opened up new areas of exploration for popular music as well, with the notion of place being of particular interest. We may consider, for example, the way in which specific places have an impact on the cultural meaning of music. Furthermore, popular music creates labels such as the “Liverpool” or “Montreal” sound which function as genre-like distinctions. But what does it mean to attribute such a label? Popular music also embraces musical and social hybridity via techniques such as sampling, quotation or imitation, influenced by factors such as travel, immigration and the recent virtual proximity of the Internet. The interrelationship of these musical, social, and technological elements is in turn affected by the economic environment, shaped by both changes in the cultural industries, such as the record industry meltdown, and the current global financial crisis. Our understanding of space and environment is neither simple nor static, and the relationship of these to music is extensive and complex.
We invite suggestions for individual presentations, panels, workshops or performances on a broad range of topics related to the theme of the conference, including, but not limited to, the following:
* Sampling as recycling and recontextualisation;
* Music and environmental activism;
* The life-cycles of musical technologies
* The turn towards urban forms of musical composition within the domain of acoustic ecology and soundscape studies;
* Ethnographic and "field" recordings as musical source material;
* "Expert" musical environments (critical, musical, journalistic, scientific, industrial, political, etc.), their roles, their interventions, their provisions;
* The creation of moods and of atmospheres in/by the music;
* Putting music in its environment, singing/composing its environment (sounding the scape);
* The alliances, affinities and networks allowing the constitution and development of different musical environments;
* Music and landscape, architecture and design;
* Movements, mobilities and trajectories of actors, of products, of groups, of catalogs, etc.;
* Music, time, duration, and memories;
* Natural catastrophes in songs and music
Abstracts for individual presentations, workshops, and performances must not surpass 300 words. Abstracts for panels must include a summary of 300 words or less for the panel as a whole, as well as abstracts not surpassing 300 words for each of the incorporated presentations. The programme committee reserves the right to accept a panel while refusing one of the proposed presentations or, on the other hand, to accept an individual presentation but to refuse the panel.
All abstracts must include a short biography (100 words or less) of the author(s), including institutional affiliation, and e-mail address. Every submission must equally include five words keys identifying the subject of the paper.
Please submit your abstract in French or English, depending on the language in which the paper will be presented by October 21, 2010 (for consideration for travel reimbursement) or November 15, 2010 (final deadline for all others) to [log in to unmask]<mailto:[log in to unmask]>
All proposals will be read blind and evaluated by the program committee.
The program committee consists of the following individuals:
▪ Dr. David Brackett, Professor, Musicology, McGill University
▪ Dr. Owen Chapman, Assistant Professor, Communication Studies, Concordia University
▪ Dr. Line Grenier, Associate Professor, Communication Studies, University of Montreal
▪ Mimi Haddon, Ph.D. Candidate, Popular Music Studies/ Musicology, McGill University
▪ Hélène Laurin, Ph.D. Candidate, Communication Studies, McGill University
▪ Dr. Martin Lussier, Postdoctoral Fellow, Faculty of Information and Media Studies, University of Western Ontario
▪ Dr. Charity Marsh, Canada Research Chair in Interactive Media and Performance, University of Regina
▪ Dr. Will Straw, Professor, Department of Art History and Communications Studies, McGill University
Papers will be limited to a standard 20-minute length followed by 10 minutes of questions, whereas other presentations will be limited to 60 minutes. All participants must be members of IASPM-Canada. Membership information is available on the following website:
www.iaspm.ca<http://www.iaspm.ca/>
For questions about the conference, contact conference chair Will Straw, at william.straw(at)mcgill.ca
Submission deadlines:
October 21, 2010 (for consideration for travel reimbursement)
November 15, 2010 (final deadline for all others)
Applicants will be notified of the program committee’s final decisions by December 15, 2010.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
To unsubscribe send an e-mail message to
[log in to unmask] with no subject and "unsubscribe" (without quotes)
as the only content of the message
* **************************************************************
ACS List rules, signoff instructions, and other important stuff:
http://listserv.uta.fi/archives/acs.html
* **************************************************************
***************************************************************************************************************
University of the West of Scotland aims to have a transformational influence on the economic, social and cultural development of the West of Scotland and beyond by providing relevant, high quality, inclusive higher education and innovative and useful research.
Visit www.uws.ac.uk for more details
University of the West of Scotland is a registered Scottish charity. Charity number SC002520.
***************************************************************************************************************
Legal disclaimer
--------------------------
The information transmitted is the property of the University of the West of Scotland and is intended only for the person or entity
to which it is addressed and may contain confidential and/or privileged material. Statements and opinions expressed in this e-mail may not represent those of the company. Any review, retransmission, dissemination and other use of, or taking of any action in reliance upon, this information by persons or entities other than the intended recipient is prohibited.
If you received this in error, please contact the sender immediately and delete the material from any computer.
--------------------------
########################################################################
To unsubscribe from the UWSCREATIVE list, click the following link:
http://jiscmail.ac.uk/cgi-bin/webadmin?SUBED1=UWSCREATIVE&A=1
|