CALL FOR PAPERS: Shane  Meadows day event, University of East Anglia, FRIDAY 16th  APRIL 2010


Since  the  attention-grabbing  short  film  Smalltime  (1996)  and  his  debut 
feature  TwentyFourSeven (1997),  director  Shane  Meadows  has  emerged 
as  arguably    the  most  distinctive  young  filmmaker  in  contemporary 
British  cinema.  Following  the  critical  and  commercial  success  of  This  is 
England  (2007) - soon  to  be  developed  into  a  TV  series  by  Channel 
Four - Meadows  has  continued  his  project  of  providing  the  forgotten 
communities  and  anonymous  spaces  of  provincial  England  with  a 
singular  cinematic  voice.  Having  attracted  only  limited  scholarly 
attention  thus  far,  the  time  is  ripe  for  a  comprehensive  overview  of 
Meadows’  oeuvre.

We  seek  original  20 minute papers for  an event devoted  to  Meadows’ 
output  and  his  place  within  contemporary  British  film and television, and
we plan to publish selected papers as an edited collection.

Topics  could  include  (but  are  certainly  not  limited  to):

- Representations  of  gender  (particularly  masculinity,  but  also  the 
possible marginalisation  of  women  in  Meadows’  films)
- Class and marginal communities/lifestyles
- Race / ethnicity
- Meadows and  auteurism
- Regionalism /parochialism
- English-ness / British-ness
- Fatherhood  as  structuring  motif  in  Meadows’  work
- Comedy  and  the  function  of  humour in  Meadows’  oeuvre  (comparisons
with class-based/regional  humour  of  Peter  Kay  and  Shameless,  for 
example)
- Meadows’  films  and  their  relationship  to  the  social-realist  tradition
- Representations  of  the family
- Meadows’  short  films
- Meadows’  TV  work,  including  the  Shane’s  World  series  for  Channel  4
- Acting / performance / improvisation in  Meadows’  films  (e.g. professional
vs. non-professional  performers)
- Representation  of  children / youth
- Nostalgia / the 1980s
- Dialogue / dialect
- Depictions of urban and rural landscape
- Meadows and genre
- Critical / popular  reception  of  Meadows’  work
- Meadows’  ‘independence’  and  his  relationship  to contemporary  British 
cinema / association  with  Warp  records / funding
- Music  in  Meadows’  films
- Meadows’  use  of  digital  technology / DIY  aesthetic / filmmaking 
practice 
- His influences and intertexts

Please send 300-word abstracts to Sarah Godfrey ([log in to unmask]">[log in to unmask]) by
31 January 2010.






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