CfP: Heroes, Canons, Cults. Critical Inquiries, Wien

Heroes, Canons, Cults.
Critical Inquiries

isaScience 2021 from 11-15 August 2021

Deadline: 28.02.2021

Conference venue: Hotel Marienhof, Hauptstraße 71-73, 2651 Reichenau an der Rax, Austria

Keynote speakers (t.b.c. for 2021):
Esteban Buch (EHESS/France), Milena Dragićević Šešić (University of Arts Belgrade/Serbia), Denise Gill (Stanford/USA), Mina Yang (Minerva/USA)

Organisers of isaScience: Dagmar Abfalter, Marko Kölbl, Rosa Reitsamer, Fritz Trümpi

Coordinator: Karoline Feyertag

Contact: isascience@mdw.ac.at

Further information: mdw.ac.at/isa/isascience



isaScience 2021 focuses on critical perspectives on heroic imaginations, cultic actions and the formation and maintenance of canons. Across musical styles and cultural spheres, heroes, cults and canons contribute to the creation of normative and exclusionary and even violent settings, dictating what ears and eyes should deem adequate and valuable. Likewise, heroisation, cultification and canonisation define what remains unheard, unseen and regarded as unworthy.

Historically, the making of “heroes” and the processes of canon formation have been closely associated with Western art music and the celebration of certain composers as “great artists” as well as the consecration of their works as “masterpieces”. These practices employed for the production of artistic values are informed by the ideology of the autonomous artist and the increasing formation of a museal culture that developed throughout the 19th century. Moreover, these practices supported the emergence of a more strictly defined boundary between “highbrow” and “lowbrow” cultural forms and became the dominant standard by which popular and traditional music forms were evaluated. These developments are closely linked to Eurocentric, imperialist and elitist institutions such as opera houses, concert halls and music conservatoires that allowed for classed, gendered and racialized modes of producing, performing, consuming and appropriating music.

Later on, despite discursive struggles over cultural authority, the music industry ̶ including music publishers, record company personnel, journalists and other cultural intermediaries ̶ as well as the development of recording technology, the internet and social media have played a significant role in the definition of stardom, the making of heroes and the processes of canon formation within diverse cultural worlds, including jazz, rock/pop, hip hop, traditional music, classical music and folk music, among others. The introduction of electrical recording, for example, allowed for the availability of vernacular musics in locally specific languages and dialects, giving rise to colonial ethnographies of indigenous music. Simultaneously, this technological innovation offered colonised populations the opportunity to hear themselves, to construct musical canons and to gain a sense of identity which was necessary for anti-colonial action. More recently, individuals and groups have made use of the technologies afforded by the internet in order to document, preserve and disseminate alternative music histories and to challenge the mainstream musical canon that has traditionally marginalised artists of colour, non-western performers, female musicians and queer figures.

However, mainstream musical canons provide the raw material for the commercial music industry to make a profit, while the tourism industry builds on nostalgia and the commemoration of musical heroes, traditions and canons to actively brand and market cities or even nation states like Austria. Commemoration can result in fandom culture, possibly culminating in religious and spiritual ascriptions and cults around music and musical heroes, with some fans strongly engaging in brand communities. Moreover, commemorative cultural policies manifest themselves in monuments, archives and festivals, maintaining and reinforcing canons at the expense of innovation and diversity. In that respect, canonical usages of traditional music as normative representations of regional and national culture—as evident for example in UNESCO’s intangible cultural heritage lists—obscure various strata of other forms of cultural expressions, particularly those of marginalized groups.

Academic and artistic research on musical heroes and canons have frequently further reinforced dominant structures and perceptions of music, for example the image of the white male composer or the representation of certain musics as part of the world’s cultural canon, often deeply rooted in colonial imaginations and corresponding ethnographies. Feminist critiques of “founding fathers”, their followers and successors as well as investigations of how and why women get lost in canonization processes have become important discourses in the current academic debate. The heroisation of (predominantly white, cis-gendered, male) academics corresponds to the canonization processes they have induced. In ethnographic disciplines, fieldwork’s mystic aura as a heroic quest, as brave endurance promising the ultimate accolade, has added to the deification of the ethnographer as a saviour of culture.

In the course of the global pandemic, musicians became heroes in times of despair, perceived as both crucial voices and forgotten relicts of a pre-Covid world. As the online world gains unprecedented significance as a social space, canons and cults shift in scope and content. How does the pandemic challenge, how foster heroes and canons in music?

The conference seeks to address the following thematic streams from critical perspectives with a particular focus on post-colonial, feminist, queer or class-sensitive analysis. We welcome proposals from any discipline, using any methodology and addressing any kind of music and dance, including the spheres of film and theatre. Topic proposals include but are not limited to:



The historical making of heroes and the processes of canon construction in diverse musical and performing arts worlds and their actors (e.g. the media, critics, nationalists, audiences)
Cultural imperialism and Western art music
Political functions of musical canons past and present (e.g. nationalism, racism)
The significance of canons, heroes and cults in the construction of music histories and heritage formations
De/re/construction of disciplinary canons relating to music and performing arts
Critical reflections on academic and activist efforts to inscribe female composers in the canon of Western art music
Racial oppression and the hegemonies of canons
Economic aspects of canonisation
The role of audiences, music journalists and critics in creating, fostering and challenging heroes, canons and cults
The role of sexual abuse in the construction of musical canons and stardom
Digital archives as tools for the pluralisation of stardom constructions and the construction of alternative music histories
Places of remembrance, intangible cultural heritage and musical canons
Museums and exhibitions as tools for the making of local heroes and the construction of musical canons
Music and dance in religious cults
Impacts of COVID-19 on processes of musical canonisation and marginalisation



Abstracts should include theoretical framework, methodology and a “key word” line.
Please submit your abstract in English (max. 300 words, including literature) for papers and panels as well as workshops and innovative formats, a short biography (max. 100 words) and your institutional affiliation, until 28 February 2021 to isascience@mdw.ac.at.
Decisions on the acceptance of the proposals will be announced by mid-April 2021.

No registration fee!

Complimentary funding is available for students and scholars in academic precarity upon acceptance of the proposal and application (if they are able to travel to Reichenau/Rax according to Covid-19 global travel restrictions in effect in August 2021). For more information on the funding application, please visit our website!

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