Sounds like a great idea for a conference:
CfP: Conference on Mermaids, Maritime Folklore, and Modernity
http://www.fantastic-arts.org/2016/cfp-conference-on-mermaids-maritime-folklore-and-modernity/
Conference on Mermaids, Maritime Folklore, and Modernity
24-27 October 2017, Copenhagen, Denmark
This interdisciplinary conference addresses the prominence of the mermaid and related creatures from folklore, myth, legend, and the imagination in 19th, 20th, and 21st-Century culture.
The past decades have seen an explosion of mermaid imagery in western and, increasingly, global popular culture. This is particularly evident in cinema, television, literature, and various web-based forms but is also widely diffused in music, design, performance, cosplay, and other activities. Simultaneously, mermen, selkies, sirens, and newer figures such as caecelia and merlions have been subject to representation and discussion in a range of contexts. From Hans Christian Andersen’s story ‘The Little Mermaid’ (Den lille Havfrue) to Jennifer Donnely’s WaterFire Saga, from Curtis Harrington’s Night Tide to Stephen Chow’s The Mermaid (美人鱼), from Edvard Eriksen’s iconic ‘The Little Mermaid’ statue to Banksy’s Dismaland distortion, from the mermaid show at Weeki Wachi Springs to the digital mermaids at Macau’s City of Dreams, mermaids have served as figures of romance, horror, comedy, mystery, lust, and adventure across countless media and cultural practices.
Cultural globalisation has furthermore drawn a wide range of non-western creatures and deities into the sphere of mermaid associations. Representations of aquatic spirits from around the world – Thailand’s Suvannamaccha, West Africa’s Mami Wata, Indonesia’s Nyai Loro Kidul, Russia’s rusalka, Brazil’s Iara, and many more – are increasingly influencing and being influenced by western mermaid culture. This is a continuation of a process that has occurred in the West itself, as figures from Mesopotamia and Classical antiquity influenced Medieval and Early Modern Western European perceptions and interpretations of real and imagined encounters with aquatic beings.
How to make a presentation.
Papers and panels are invited on all aspects of mermaids and related entities in 19th, 20th, and 21st-Century culture. Presentations will address such issues as:
- Representations in popular culture
- Representations in fine art contexts
- Aficionado cultures and/or cosplay
- Contemporary folk belief
- Cultural Theory and interpretation
- Sexualities and identification
- Roles as objects of horror, comedy, sex, etc.
- International comparisons
- Official symbols and symbolism
The deadline for abstracts is 31 March 2017, but to ensure that you have the opportunity to take part in the conference and have the time to seek funding from your institution, we recommend that you submit your abstract early.
Artists working in various media are also invited to approach the organizers about presenting their work at the conference.
Keynote speaker.
The conference keynote speech will be given by Philip Hayward, whose new book Making a Splash! Mermaids (and Mermen) in 20th and 21st Century Audiovisual Media (JLP/University of Indiana Press) will be launched at the conference.
About the conference.
On 24- 25 October, delegates will explore Copenhagen, visiting mermaid- related
sites and engaging in the local culture. Besides seeing Edvard
Eriksen’s 1913 statue of ‘The Little Mermaid’, which has become a
national symbol of Denmark, the conference group will visit numerous
other works of merfolk art and engage with Copenhagen’s vibrant culture.
On the evening of 18 October, delegates will visit the enchanting
Tivoli Gardens amusement park. Conference presentations will take place
on 26- 27 October at VerdensKulturCentret.
Publication.
We
will be putting together an edited book or journal special issue as a
result of this conference. More information will be available in early
summer 2017.
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