Print

Print


CALL FOR PAPERS

*Millennial Masculinities: Queers, Pimp Daddies and Lumbersexuals*

*Massey University, Wellington New Zealand*

*December 10-11 2019*

*Keynote Speakers*
Christopher Breward, National Galleries of Scotland
Pamela Church Gibson, London College of Fashion, University of the Arts
Shaun Cole, Winchester School of Art, University of Southhampton
Andrew Reilly, University of Hawaii

*Convenor*
Vicki Karaminas, Massey University, New Zealand

In the age under the shadow of accused sexual predator Harvey Weinstein,
Vladimir Putin’s hypermasculinity and conservative politician Donald Trump,
the question of masculine identity looms as exigently as ever. While it is
proper to identity construction of all kinds to question and deliberate
upon what is constituted as desirable, it is now the sheer multiplicity of
masculine identities, coupled with the reassertion of some of the less
desirable, that makes this area of inquiry so rich, and so necessary.

Looking at the present inevitably involves combing the past: stylish types
appeared in the West during the 19th century, such as the dandy or the
restless bohemian, or postwar masculinities such as the beatnik hipster,
the rebel, the hippie, or the playboy. The social and political upheavals
of the 1960s (which includes Stonewall Riots in 1969) and beyond
precipitated the so-called “crisis in masculinity” in which recourse to the
age-old models of bold, straight, breadwinner was no longer the default
model of what men ought to be. Gay and lesbian liberation, civil rights and
the women’s movement placed normative masculinities on shaky ground. A
confluence of a number of factors that had destabilised traditional, white
middle-class, masculinity and gave rise to the men’s movement which
contained branches that were masculine and pro-feminist. The emergence of
the ‘New Man’ which was aided by the rise the retail sector and the style
press, targeted affluent young male consumers and produced new kinds of
images of men and their bodies in many cases reflective of by gay
pornography.

By the 90s, this mediated ‘New Man’ had virtually disappeared and was
replaced by the loutish New Lad. Labels come and go, and the beginning of
the new millennium heralded the metrosexual, a consumer of luxury goods and
cosmetics commensurate with any woman. In the new millennium, the
effects of climate change and global warming, along with the sustainability
and slow food movement, has produced new mediated masculinities, the
repackaged urban hipster and his modern huntsman brother, the lumbersexual
who has retreated back to nature. Masculinities are temporarily and
spatially contingent and are embedded in culture, language and
representation.

Yet the history of men’s fashion has tended to be the history of men’s
fashion in the West. A history that prioritises European, rather than
indigenous or non-western dress practices. Little attention has also been
paid to the ways in which dress and appearance construct masculinities and
connections with traditions in settler or colonised societies. This can be
said of the Congo’s Sapeurs and the Death Metal Cowboys of Botswana where
the dialectics between colonised/coloniser are complicated.

Millennial Masculinities is a two day interdisciplinary conference that
explores the expression of masculinities through constructions of fashion,
identity, style and appearance across the Arts and Humanities. Its areas of
inquiry include cultural and gender theory, art history, fashion
studies, film studies, literature, philosophy and sociology amongst others.

There will be the opportunity for papers to be published in a special issue
of *Critical Studies in **Men’s Fashion*, as well as the journals *Film,
Fashion and Consumption* and the *Journal of Asia Pacific Pop Culture.*

Suggested topics include:

• Masculinities and cinema
• Representations of masculinity
• Masculinities and consumption
• Subcultural style
• Advertising men
• Queer film
• Men in uniforms
• Fashion film
• Celebrity men
• Indigenous male identities
• Fashion editorial
• Fetish men
• Hyper masculinities
• Reigning men in royalty
• Postcolonial masculinities
• Men in history
• Queer masculinities
• Minority/subaltern masculinities
• Drag kings/performativities of masculinities
• Technologies and masculinities
• Globalization and masculinities
• Contested masculinities

*Submission Guidelines:*

E-mail a 150-word abstract with title and a list of keywords, your name and
contact details, institution/department, and a brief 3-5 sentence bio in
one word doc.

Send paper abstracts with subject title Millennial Masculinities to Vicki
Karaminas [log in to unmask]

*Important Dates:*

Deadline for Submission of proposals: August 30, 2019
Notification of Acceptance: 15 September, 2019.

-- 
Tessa Mathieson,
Marketing Assistant
Intellect Ltd

*Intellect Ltd, The Mill, Parnall Road, Fishponds, Bristol BS16 3JG Tel:
0117 958 9910*


*[image: https://www.intellectbooks.com/] <https://www.intellectbooks.com/>*

--
To manage your subscription or unsubscribe from the Film-Philosophy list, please visit: http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/lists/film-philosophy.html
--
Journal: http://www.euppublishing.com/loi/film
Conference: http://www.film-philosophy.com/conference/
--