| |||||||||||
Popculture and mediated memory: the Czec 2016 : CfP Popculture and mediated memory: the Czech comics. | |||||||||||
| |||||||||||
Call For Papers | |||||||||||
Call for papers
Ca' Foscari University of Venice Department of Linguistics and Comparative Cultural Studies (DSLCC) Popculture and mediated memory: the Czech comics. Venice, 18 -19 April 2016 Deadline per papers proposal: 1st February 2016. The Czech language and literature section of the Department of Linguistics and Comparative Cultural Studies (DSLCC) in collaboration with the Workshop for the Literary Study of Comics Department of Linguistics and Comparative Cultural Studies (DSLCC), organizes the conference Popculture and mediated memory: the Czech comics, aimed to study the relation between mediated memory and the comics focused on the Czech comics. As mediated memory we refer to the fact that mediated materials are the shared cultural bases on which collective memory is built. In this process, popular culture forms, comics, pop and rock music, and television as medium of lived daily life, hold a central and increasingly incisive role. Collective memory (J. Assmann 1995) has to be mediated to circulate, and the historical changes in memory are related to the change in the media production. Collective memory elements can be transferred to the following generations only through their mediation with images, texts (also audiovisual) and narrative conventions (A. Assmann 2011; A. Landsberg 2004; G. Lipsitz 2001). Generational stratification of popular culture is such strong and complex that can draw and rely on its own memory as a linguistic repertoire. Through different papers and points of view, the conference is also aimed to study how in Czech context comics became a cultural production source strongly bound to the formation of memory of recent past, especially the periods of the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, the Second World War and the socialist period, but also the inter-war years. We refer to comics as Michal Kocián and Zdeněk Ležák's Stopa legionáře I and II , also authors of Ve jménu Husa. Beside a contemporary production facing the recent past, the study of mediated memory has to take into consideration the past production. This production is tied from one side to an aimed historical interpretation, and from another side to the propagandistic task of culture, especially in popular culture. It is enough to quote the comics adaptations of the Resistance hero story, Franta Pérák, from the 1948 version Pérákovy další osudy and the more recent Ondřej Neff's version as a superhero in the 1988. Transmediated nature of memory is clearly expressed by Kaia Saudek's Major Zeman a jeho 6 případů, the comics version of the Tv series The 30 cases of Major Zeman, A further field of study is the complicated relationship between socialist culture and the comics: from the regulations of the medium and the reception of the established cultural norms by the author, to the production of underground culture. From the changes in Foglar's Rychlé šípy in the 1945-47 period to Karel Sadecký's Octobriana. These comics work as a medium of construction of the past, a past that became communicative, shared, mediated and re-mediated memory (J. van Dijck 2007; A. Erll 2011). Papers may be related to (but not bound) the study of representation modes of historical national past in the comics; influence of retro as a way to relate history in the republishing and success of old comics (vintage and retro); interrelation and correlation between comics and other media related to historical memory and collective memory; influence of visual elements in the representation of historical period (colour, black and white, accurate or stylized feature etc.) and its influence in the recognition mechanism of historical period; reception of comics text related to individual and collective memory in the multimedia cultural context. Comparative analysis and single case studies are welcome. Conference languages: Italian, English and Czech. Please, sent an abstracts (max. 800 characters including spaces) and a short CV by: 1st February 2016 to the address tiziana.damico@unive.it Works cited A. Assmann, Cultural Memory and Western Civilization: Functions, Media, Archives, Cambridge University Press, 2011; J. Assmann, “Collective Memory and Cultural Identity” in New German Critique, No. 65, Cultural History/Cultural Studies (Spring - Summer, 1995), pp. 125-133; A. Erll, Memory in Culture, Palgrave Macmillan 2011; A. Landsberg, Prostethic memory. The transformation of American remembrance in the age of mass culture, Columbia University Press, 2004; G. Lipsitz, Time Passages: Collective Memory and American Popular Culture, University of Minnesota press, 2001; J. van Dijck, Mediated Memories in the Digital Age (Cultural Memory in the Present), Stanford University Press 2007; |
|