Date: January 12th 2010

CALL FOR PAPERS

 

On, Archives!  Celebrating 50 Years of the Wisconsin Center for Film and Theater Research  
a conference on media, theater and history

July 6-9, 2010Madison, Wisconsin

 


In 2010 the Wisconsin Center for Film and Theater Research celebrates its 50th anniversary.  Formed in 1960 as a joint project of the Wisconsin Historical Society and what was then the Department of Speech at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, the WCFTR was one of the earliest institutions in the United States to perceive the value in preserving and collecting archival materials in American film, radio, television and theater.  Conjointly with the WHS’s extensive Mass Communication collections, the WCFTR has continued to build a resource used by scholars, researchers, students, and the general public alike to keep the history of media and the dramatic arts alive and to aid in our understanding of cinema, radio, television, drama, and popular culture as globally vital phenomena. 

In this its 50th year, the Center will celebrate by hosting a conference focused on film, radio, television and theater history, and on the challenges of archiving in these areas. We invite a broad range of scholarship touching on the concerns of the collections here at Madison, and particularly invite those whose work has brought them here to consult our papers, films, recordings, and graphic materials in the course of their work. Equally important are considerations of archiving popular, aural, and visual culture.  We invite presentations of historical work  and contemporary work with roots in the historical  in the fields of film, theater, and broadcasting, and in archival issues and debates, for a four-day celebration of the study of media and performance culture in America and around the world, July 6-9, 2010, in Madison.

 

We invite you to submit papers in any of the following areas, or on related subjects.  We are particularly interested in work that makes use of the Center’s or the Society’s collections, or that of other archival venues.

- the history of film production, exhibition, and distribution in the US and abroad

- the history of broadcasting in the United States, and in other places and context

- the history of American theater production and performance, and international counterparts

- issues and challenges of media archiving, including the digital future

- the role of history in the study of media and popular culture

- historiographical methods and theory

- creative authorship in film, broadcasting, and theater

- the future of media and theater history

<< Previous: CFP: American Society for the History of Rhetoric at the National Communication Association Annual Meeting

| Archive Index |

Next: CFP: Fiske Matters: John Fiske's Continuing Legacy for Cultural Studies >>

(archive rss , atom )

this list's archives:


The Communication History Discussion List is a scholarly listserv devoted to all aspects of media and communication history.

Subscribe to Communication History Discussion List:

|

Powered by Dada Mail 2.10.14
Copyright © 1999-2007, Simoni Creative.