CFP: POP PERSONAE. PERFORMING AND NEGOTIATING IDENTITIES IN POPULAR MUSIC, Bayreuth
POP PERSONAE. PERFORMING AND NEGOTIATING IDENTITIES IN POPULAR MUSIC
January 24-25, 2020
Conference Center of the University of Bayreuth
Conference by American, Music & Theater Studies at the University of Bayreuth, Germany
Deadline: 15.09.2019
When in the late 70’s David Bowie was asked about his alter ego The Thin White Duke’s alleged fascist character, the pop singer emphasized that this was not his political conviction. Instead, he underlined that the stage persona was an artificial creation: “What I’m doing is theatre, and only theatre. [...] I’m using myself as a canvas and trying to paint the truth of our time on it.“ Similar statements can be found by many other pop artists, i.e. Lady Gaga, Janelle Monáe, Annie Lennox, who thereby highlight pop music’s inherent theatricality. At the same time, many pop stars meticulously take care to appear approachable and “real”, which is supported by the media valuing “honesty”. The relation between theatricality and authenticity is rather complex and touches upon the diverse aspects – economical, historical, social – related to contemporary notions of “stardom” or “celebrity”. In pop music, there is a tension between scandal and convention, between surprise and predictability, and the creation of pop personae often shifts between reinvention and continuity, as well as between commerce and musical ambition or political conviction.
In the mid-2000s, Philip Auslander has coined the term “musical persona” by referring to Simon Frith’s emphasis on the performative aspects of the star persona in Performing Rites (1996). To shift the focus to the performative aspects of (popular) music has meant a move beyond the analysis of musical structures and an inclusion of aspects of visual imagery, kinesics, style and fashion histories, a certain popular cultural knowledge and imagination, economics, including as well as a broadening of the methods of analysis (discourse analysis, historical perspectives, gender studies etc.). By creating their persona along the axes of identity categories like gender, race, sexuality, and others, pop singers participate in contemporary sociocultural discourses concerning these aspects. As various authors have emphasized, pop personae are thus not separated from the societies in which they appear, but can be interpreted as comments, projections or spaces of negotiation of sociocultural topics and diverse forms of identities.
Since the mid-2000s, the star personae of pop musicians have become a central subject of popular music scholarship, but mostly in singular studies, articles and theme-related conferences. We aim at bringing this broad scholarship together at our conference in Bayreuth which will be collectively organized by American, Music and Theatre Studies. This conference aims primarily at the intersections, overlappings and the mutual influences within the different contexts in which pop personae can be located.
For this conference, we invite papers from Popular Music Studies, Theatre Studies, Performance Studies, Media Studies, Cultural Studies, Social Semiotics, Gender Studies, History of Media, History of Popular Music, that are concerned with one of the following subjects:
The Pop Persona and Cultural Debates
the pop persona as site of negotiation of cultural values, ideas or even ideologies; the pop persona and the affirmation or the dissolution of identity categories; pop persona and discourses of resistance, activism, feminism, political consciousness
The Pop Persona and Theatricality
pop personae between artificiality/theatricality and authenticity/realness; between the particular and the ordinary; between the surprising and the expected; between virtuosity and “mere” spectacle; between presence/embodiment/presentation and absence/ imagination/ fiction; the creation/representation of persona through image and/or sound
The Pop Persona and History
the histories and typologies of pop personae and the means/media that they are/were created and communicated by; the relations between the ‘biographical person’, the song characters and the persona as well as the transformations of pop personae in the course of time; the history of the pop persona as commodity and of the economical aspects of popular music
The Pop Persona and Methodology different approaches to and methods of pop persona analysis; interdisciplinary approaches to the analysis of different media; the future of pop persona analysis
We invite you to send us your title, abstract (300 words, in English) and affiliation by September 15, 2019 to the following email-address: katharina.rost @ uni-bayreuth.de
Prof. Dr. Jeanne Cortiel, American Studies, University of Bayreuth
Prof. Dr. Kordula Knaus, Music Studies, University of Bayreuth
Dr. Katharina Rost, Theater Studies, University of Bayreuth