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PYGYWG  December 2018

PYGYWG December 2018

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Subject:

RGS-IGB 2019 CFP: Geographies of Doctor Who

From:

Morag Rose <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Morag Rose <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Fri, 21 Dec 2018 11:12:53 +0000

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Hello everyone,

I hope this is of interest to at least some of you. Thank you to all at PYGYWG for your support and inspiration, whatever Christmas means to you I hope you have a well deserved break and a splendid 2019.

Best wishes

Morag

Call for papers at the RGS-IGB Conference, 28th-30th August 2019 London, UK

Geographies of Doctor Who: Jelly Babies, Bad Wolf and The Junk Yard Inside Me

Session Convenors: Dr Morag Rose (University of Liverpool) Dr Jo Norcup (University of Glasgow) and Dr Phil Smith (University of Plymouth)

“There are worlds out there where the sky is burning, and the sea’s asleep, and the rivers dream; people made of smoke and cities made of song. Somewhere there’s danger, somewhere there’s injustice, and somewhere else the tea’s getting cold. Come on, Ace. We’ve got work to do.” (Survival, S26:E4)

This session seeks to explore how popular culture can help us experience fantastic and abject geographies and enrich our wider praxis. Doctor Who was first broadcast by The BBC in 1963 and has become the longest running, and arguably the most successful, science fiction television series of all time. We want to both celebrate the impact of this beloved television institution and use it as a lens to expand and play with our geographical thinking. We are inspired by work which pays serious attention to entertainment such as Kneale and Kitchin on science fiction (2001, 2002), the landscape of Detectorists (chaired by Keighren and Norcup at last years conference) and the Academic Archers (Courage, Headlem et al). We therefore invite you to apply your theoretical frameworks to imaginary worlds and the material locations of fictions; to think outside the (police) box.

Suggestions for papers include, but are absolutely not limited to:
· Physical geography, geology, climatology and oceanography of Whovian landscapes
· Queering, cripping, decolonising and creating alternative visions of the Whoninverse
· Constructions of gender, race, sexuality, nationality, citizenship, the alien and other identities performed in Doctor Who
· Ethnographies and materialities of fandom and fan communities
· Historical geographies, memory and commemoration
· Landscapes, location, soundscapes and embodied encounters in the Whoinverse
· How The Doctor reflects upon and engages with contemporary issues
· Multiple temporalities, regeneration, evolution and decay in the Whoniverse
· Spatialities and technology of, and beyond, the Tardis
· Psychogeographies, affect and emotion in and regarding Doctor Who
· Cartographic and other representations of the Doctor Who Universe
· How ideas of travel across space, scale, and time, interconnects and interplays across geographies and other academic disciplines
· What the programme can offer in thinking about future visions of worlds
· How Doctor Who encapsulates the conference theme: geographies of trouble / geographies of hope.

We take a flexible and generous approach to definitions of geography and welcome papers that are inter, multi and trans disciplinary. Although we are operating within a conference structure we are open to ideas other than the traditional paper format. We welcome papers from all species and anywhere in time and space and will not discriminate between classic and new who or work that challenges the cannon. We hope that together we can organise a session that is joyful, irreverent, illuminating and a theoretical adventure in time and space.

Please send abstracts of around 250 words to Morag Rose [log in to unmask] by 30th January 2019. Please don’t hesitate to get in touch if you have any questions or comments.

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