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June 2008, Week 1

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From:
Sean Redmond <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Film and TV Studies Discussion List <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Mon, 2 Jun 2008 21:03:12 +1200
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Sounding Science Fiction

 

Call For Papers: New Edited Collection

Closing Date: July 1st 2008

 

Sounding Science Fiction will be an edited collection that examines the way that sound, in all its aesthetic and technological forms, is deployed to audio-sense a science fiction encounter, world, or universe. The collection will be concerned with sound design and sound signification, and with affect and feeling, so that questions of form, style, narrative, authorship, production, subjectivity, and embodiment, will all work their way into the book. Science fiction film and television, live cinema, music video, computer games, advertising, weblogs, digital art, mixed media installations, radio, and music, are all potential sites of investigation and analysis.

 

The questions that energise this call for papers centre on:

How does one sound science fiction?

How do the sounds of science fiction affect/move/interpolate audiences?

What semiotic, ideological, spatial, phenomenological, psychoanalytical relations are in play when one sounds science fiction?

What is the relationship between science fiction sound and image, or sound and space, or sound and exhibition context?

When one hears (but does not see) science fiction, what images are brought to the mind, what feelings of the 'future' are created?

 

Essays could take any number of approaches to the topic, but could include:

 

Otherworldly sounds

Hearing the uncanny

Sound as prophecy and enlightenment

Alien sounds and otherness (sex, race, gender, class)

Sound design (and full future world immersion)

Sound effects/affect

Composition/composers

Sounding future weapons/warfare/cities/movement/travel/invasions/space

Sounding Global (catastrophe)

The interiority of science fiction sound (existential sound)

Sound as trauma, loss, dystopia

Sounding science fiction paranoia

The carnality of science fiction sound

Posthuman sound

Sounding cyborg

Contrapuntal music and the science fiction image/artefact

Sounding scientific/rationalist (in dialogue, speech, voice-over)

Live science fiction sound

The sound image

The 'moment' of sound (close textual analysis of a key sequence)

Authoring science fiction sound: key auteurs of sound design

Cultish science fiction sound

 

Sounding Science Fiction's multi-disciplinary and multi-site focus will build on the work done in single case studies such as William Whittington's Sound Design and Science Fiction (2007), and on edited collections such as Philip Hayward's Off The Planet: Music, Sound And Science Fiction Cinema (2004), which take film/cinema as their central/sole text. 

 

Proposals of approximately 500 words can be sent electronically, preferably as a word attachment, to:

 

Sean Redmond: [log in to unmask] <mailto:[log in to unmask]> 

Senior Lecturer in Film Studies,

Victoria University of Wellington,

New Zealand

 

Closing Date: July 1st 2008

 

 

 

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