The Terrace Club
25 W. 51st St. (Off Fifth Ave.) New York, NY
September 2-3, 2015
A combination of media productions such as interviews, portraits, diary entries, life-writing, and unedited footage can facilitate a relation between celebrities as subjects of journalistic enquiry and modes of their representation. The biographical and autobiographical elements in these productions can express nuances and subtleties of creative drives that construct public personas. Scholars can also act as journalists and interview celebrities, adding research as informed opinions. As celebrity studies scholar Olivier Driessens suggests, there are innovative ways in which researchers can surpass cultural intermediaries, such as managers, who control the celebrity’s agenda, and fill methodological gaps in media studies and practices.
We need to build academic, media and community partnerships to implement creative strategies and informed opinions in content production. What creative strategies do you implement to position your modes of inquiry in celebrity culture? How can journalists benefit from researchers in developing stories? Should academics become cultural critics to build an engaged audience? Show new and powerful ways of storytelling that journalists and researchers should consider in examining authentic personas in fame.
The Centre for Media and Celebrity Studies (CMCS), in association with sponsors WaterHill Publishing and Centre for Ecological, Social, and Informatics Cognitive Research (ESI.CORE), invites academics, journalists, publicists, social innovators and guests to attend, speak and collaborate at the international conference Bridging Gaps – Where is the Persona in Celebrity and Journalism? Join us in NYC where the conference will uniquely combine vibrant roundtable and workshop panels in a collaborative network! We invite original cross-disciplinary proposals for the conference. Extended version of selected best papers will be published in an edited book by WaterHill Publishing. Working papers and media productions will be considered.
Submission guidelines:
- 250-word abstract or workshop / roundtable proposal
- Include a title, your name, e-mail address, and affiliation if applicable
- Submit to conference Chairs Dr Jackie Raphael and Dr Samita Nandy at celeb.studies@gmail.com
- Deadline for submission: June 1, 2015
- Notification of acceptance: June 8, 2015
- Conference presentation: September 2-3, 2015
The format of the conference aims at being open and inclusive through roundtable and workshop panels with substantial discussion and networking sessions. We welcome speculative ideas, exploratory practices, position papers, manifestos, performances as well as traditional academic papers from affiliated and independent researchers, journalists, social innovators and related media professionals.
Topics include but are not limited to:
- Persona
- Celebrity
- Scandals
- Infamy
- Online Fame
- Social Media
- News
- Journalism
- Publicity
- Policies
- Interviews
- Audiences
- Fandom
- Fiction
- Genre
- Biography
- Literature
- Film
- Video
- Television
- Fashion
- Photography
- Selfies
- Portraiture
- Art History
- Performance
- Life Writings
- Diaspora
- Theory and Methods
- Research Agenda
- Business Models
- Ethics and Morality
- Cognition and Memory
- Media Literacy
- Social Innovation
- Education and Advocacy
- Community Building
- Business and Community Partnerships
Enjoy your stay and meetings at Club Quarters during the conference. We invite applicants to visit www.clubquarters.com to view the hotel. Discounted rates will be available for accepted delegates after June 8, 2015.
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