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Monthly Archives: January 2017

Please find attached the Call-for-Papers for the Current Research in Speculative Fiction (CRSF)’s 2017 postgraduate conference! CRSF is a conference for postgrads by postgrads in the fields of speculative, fantastic, and weird fiction (and all related areas).

Returning for it’s 7th year, the conference will take place at the University of Liverpool, on the 9th of June 2017, and this year we have the pleasure of welcoming Dr Bernice Murphy from Trinity College Dublin and Dr Robert Maslen from the University of Glasgow.

The deadline for abstracts is the 31st of March 2017.

CRSF 2017 Call for Papers

CFP: Star Wars and Folkloristics
by John Price

The Folk Awakens: Star Wars and Folkloristics in Popular Culture
A special issue of New Directions in Folklore

https://scholarworks.iu.edu/journals/index.php/ndif

The resurgence of the Star Wars film franchise provides folklorists a unique insight into the performance, reception, transmission, and creation of folklore in real-time. As a trademarked franchise, Star Wars encompasses movies, television shows, toys, games, clothing, and countless other forms of consumable popular culture artifacts. Allegedly built as a new version of Joseph Campbell’s monomyth, the franchise lives in the culture as more than just popular productions, but as a hybrid narrative form that imposes a top-down narrative structure onto a fan community that reciprocates and participates through performative world building. The producers of Star Wars and its fans have in effect created an entire folk system around the movies, including fan-productions like books, costumes, and holidays. This special issue of New Directions in Folklore will frame Star Wars and its role in culture in the context of folkloristic and ethnographic methodologies. Contributions are welcome from any folkloristic perspective on topics such as the following:

The intersection of popular culture and folklore
The transmission of narratives over generations
Embodied fandom and cosplay
Vernacular religions and its evolution
Crafting fandom in a hybridized digital culture
Nostalgia and memory through cinema
The complexities of narrative
The future of the narrative museum
The question of authorship and formal folklore
The power of cinema on popular culture
Ethnographic analyses of fan communities
The role of digital culture in formalizing vernacular culture

Proposals accepted no later than January 31, 2017. Please submit your name, CV, abstract (200-300 words), and a brief note on your research methods (~100 words) to newdirectionsinfolklore@gmail.com.

All submissions should be original works that are not previously published or currently under consideration for publication.