Showing posts with label Supernatural (TV Series). Show all posts
Showing posts with label Supernatural (TV Series). Show all posts

Tuesday, September 26, 2017

CFP Breaking out of the Box: Critical Essays on the Cult TV Show Supernatural (10/2/2017)

Sorry to hvave missed this earlier. I wish them well.
 
UPDATE: CFP Breaking out of the Box: Critical Essays on the Cult TV Show Supernatural
Discussion published by Dominick Grace on Saturday, September 2, 2017
https://networks.h-net.org/node/13784/discussions/193064/update-cfp-breaking-out-box-critical-essays-cult-tv-show

Type: Call for Papers
Date: October 2, 2017
Subject Fields: Cultural History / Studies, Popular Culture Studies, Theatre & Performance History / Studies, Humanities, Film and Film History


Lisa Macklem and Dominick Grace seek proposals for a refereed collection of essays on the CW cult horror show Supernatural, to be published by McFarland.

“What’s in the box?” Dean Winchester asks in “The Magnificent Seven,” episode one of the third season of Supernatural, to the befuddlement of his brother Sam and their avuncular mentor Bobby Singer, but to the delight of fans who revel in the show’s wry meta elements. Dean is of course quoting Detective Mills, Brad Pitt’s character in the thriller Se7en (1995), directed by David Fincher. Throughout its twelve-year run (to date), Supernatural has revelled in breaking out of the limitations usually implied by a television show, breaking out of the box in numerous ways. Acknowledging the popularity of the meta-play in the show, current showrunner Andrew Dabb promised the most meta-finale ever for the season twelve finale. One of the most noteworthy examples of this predilection is the extensively meta elements of the season five apocalypse plotline, which featured the character Carver Edlund (his name derived from series writers Jeremy Carver and Ben Edlund) in several episodes. Edlund is a novelist who has written supposed works of fiction that in fact document Sam and Dean Winchester’s lives, thoroughly breaking the fourth wall. Edlund is the pseudonym of Chuck Shurley—who turns out to be God, making one of his rare mainstream television appearances. However, this meta plot element represents only one of the myriad ways Supernatural has broken out of the box. Season five, episode eight (“Changing Channels”), transports Sam and Dean into the worlds of several television shows, while season six, episode fifteen, “The French Mistake,” carried the conceit further, having Sam and Dean visit the “real” world, in which they are characters in the TV show Supernatural. Season eight and nine feature as main villain the appropriately-named Metatron, the scribe of God trying to write himself into the position of God—in effect plotting in both senses of the word. Season eight also featured, in episode 8 (“Hunteri Heroici”), Warner Brothers style cartoon gimmickry, and the upcoming season thirteen promises an animated crossover episode with Scooby Doo. Season ten’s 200th episode is yet another recursive metanarrative, featuring a highschool student trying to mount a musical adaptation of the Carver Edlund novels. In short, despite its horror trappings, Supernatural has been decidedly postmodern in its liberal use of pastiche, meta, intertextuality, and generic slippage. This collection is interested in exploring the ways Supernatural breaks boundaries. Topics of potential interest include but are not limited to


  • Explicitly meta elements in Supernatural
  • Supernatural and fandom: interpenetrations
  • God, Metatron, and other Supernatural authors
  • Role and role-playing
  • Generic slippage (comedy; found footage; the musical episode)
  • Allusion and intertext in Supernatural
  • Canonicity
  • Non-Supernatural (e.g. the episodes with no fantasy elements)
  • Supernatural and genre TV
  • reality and retcon: how the show has shifted and redefined its own rules
  • casting and self-consciousness (e.g. the use of celebrity guest stars such as Linda Blair, Rick Springfield, etc.)
  • Importance of music throughout the show


Proposals of 300-500 words should be submitted to Lisa Macklem (lmacklem1@gmail.com) or Dominick Grace (dgrace2@uwo.ca) by October 1 2017. Completed papers are also welcome. Final papers should be between 5,000 and 7,000 words long and written in conformity with MLA style and will be due by May 1 2018.

Contact Info:

Dominick Grace

1285 Western Rd

London On

N6G 1H2

Contact Email:
dgrace2@uwo.ca


Sunday, June 7, 2015

CFP: Complicated Masculinities in Popular Culture (6/28/15)

Of potential interest:

CFP: Complicated Masculinities in Popular Culture

Recent scholarship supports the notion that contemporary American masculinity is complex and problematic. Many scholarly projects seem to reflect a “crisis” perspective and focus on the negative or limiting aspects of changing masculinities. In contrast, this edited collection will focus on the possibilities of multiple, fluid, complex, twenty-first-century masculinities.

Casting a wide net that considers all forms of popular media from film to video games, the collection will consider the ways that categories of race, class, ethnicity, sexuality, gender, as well as the natural and supernatural, affect conceptualizations of male identities. All of these patterns of representation are shaped in response to our global political climate: threats of terrorism, the New Jim Crow, pandemic fears, violence and crime, and women’s increased financial and political empowerment. These elements all affect and complicate depictions of masculinities, but they also open up new possibilities in terms of the ways that they can be represented, constructed, and revised. The ever-evolving world of new media and technology offers new ways of conceptualizing masculinities. People now have more options available for constructing a variety of identities, and a variety of venues open for the performance of them.

Popular culture: contemporary representations of masculinity, preference will be given to critical discussions of twenty-first-century popular culture (2000-2015).

Theoretical Concepts
● Masculinities and Men’s Studies
● Feminisms
● Media Studies
● Gender Studies
● Intersectionality
● Female Masculinities
● Comparative masculinities
● New men/masculinities
● Evolution/Devolution of masculinity

Subjects
● Utopia/Dystopia
● Anti-heroes/Villains
● Post-Apocalyptic
Monsters/vampires
● Politics/Politicians and the 24-Hour News Cycle
● Performers/Musicians
● Hip Hop Culture
● Professional Sports and Sexuality
● Domestic Violence in the Media
● Sexual Scandals
● Superheroes/Villains

Possible texts
● Anime
● Superhero films
● Television (ie: Breaking Bad, Game of Thrones, Mad Men,
Supernatural.
● Reality TV (ie: Duck Dynasty, Turtle Man)
● Police Procedural Shows (CSI)
● Films (Bromances, Chick Flicks, Buddy Films)
● Advertising
● Music/Performers
● Video Games (Call of Duty, Grand Theft Auto, MMOs, Sports
games)
● Sports (Fantasy Sports, Scandals)
● Internet (Avatars, Online Dating, Social medias)

Other ideas? Please query the editors!

Dr. Merry G. Perry (mperry@wcupa.edu) and
Dr. Cherise A. Pollard (cpollard@wcupa.edu)
West Chester University
Dept. of English, Main Hall
700 High Street
West Chester, PA 19382

Please send the following documents to complicatedmasc@gmail.com by June 28, 2015.
1. A one-page abstract (about 500 words) of your proposed chapter
2. A complete curriculum vita

The editors will notify authors of their abstract’s acceptance status by July 16, 2015.
Several presses have expressed interest in this collection.
Full chapter submissions will be original scholarly work of approximately 6,000-8,000 words in length and be due by Oct. 1, 2015.