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[UPDATE] Motley 2012: Redefining the Dominant Discourse of Popular Culturefull name / name of organization: Motley, An English Studies Journal for Diversity - Students of English Studies Association (SESA) at CSU, Fresno contact email: motleyjournalcsuf@gmail.com “Popular art is the dream of society; it does not examine itself.” –Margaret Atwood The Students of English Studies Association (SESA) of California State University, Fresno, in collaboration with Rasquache, and the Chicano Writers and Artists Association (CWAA), announces its call for papers for the 2011-2012 publication of Motley. We welcome papers related to the theme: Diversity/Redefining the Dominant Discourse of Popular Culture In recent years, popular culture has come to be considered a valid and fruitful point of academic inquiry, helping to infuse more established disciplines, including English studies, with fresh life. Scholars have become increasingly aware of the broader implications of popular culture, which encompasses such diverse media as magazines, books, film, television, comic books/graphic novels, and internet content, for discourses mis/unrepresented or marginalized within the mainstream. The mainstream, whatever ‘norms’ it actively portrays through popular culture, may perhaps be best described as an intricate matrix of discourses that corresponds to specific interests and that possesses varying types and amounts of sociopolitical agency. Some discourses are, for complex reasons, more socially influential or dominant than others and these discourses tend to govern culture as a whole from the vista of a certain ‘gaze’ that has more to do with the experience and values of that particular discourse community, and an attempt to preserve these values, than any effort toward true verisimilitude with the diverse experiences of individuals potentially outside or excluded from this governing group. We consciously and unconsciously function, as students, as scholars, as teachers, and as participants within this discourse, so that our writing and our self-expression is indefinitely engaged from a perspective that promises inclusion for all but often fails to recognize nuances in subjective experience along the lines of ethnic culture, spirituality, gender, sexuality, and language as relates to normalized popular narratives of belonging. So, what changes when such a gaze is shifted, when ownership and authority is (re)claimed by voices that have long been silenced or marginalized? We invite academic papers and creative works on a variety of topics within this theme, including but not limited to: *The role of popular media in the construction of cultures, identities, and place We also welcome papers and creative works (creative writing, art/photography, video, short film) on relevant topics, not directly addressed above, that significantly engage disciplines other than English Studies and that have consequences for communities located outside of the academy. Please e-mail submissions to motleyjournalcsuf@gmail.com by July 15th, 2012. *Graduate and undergraduate students, as well as faculty, are encouraged to submit work to the journal. Please visit us at: http://motleyjournal.wordpress.com/ cfp categories: american cultural_studies_and_historical_approaches ethnicity_and_national_identity film_and_television gender_studies_and_sexuality interdisciplinary journals_and_collections_of_essays poetry popular_culture postcolonial professional_topics religion rhetoric_and_composition science_and_culture theatre travel_writing twentieth_century_and_beyond
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