Music, Hope and Reimagining Society: the role of music in thinking around Utopia
BFE/RMA/SMI Study Day
Friday 16th June 2023
School of History, Anthropology, Philosophy and Politics, Queen’s University Belfast, UK
Call For Proposals
Whether it be in response to the climate and ecological crisis, geopolitical instability, the pandemic, societal inequalities and injustices, attempts to reimagine society emerge as ever urgent, stirring respective currents in public discourses. There are a growing number of public-funded initiatives or grassroots collaborative movements that orientate their activities towards making room for re-imagining society, aspiring to realize people's hopes for a better present and future. Two such projects within the UK are, for instance, the National Lottery Community Fund's 'Growing Great Ideas' or ‘Civic Square’ in Birmingham’s 'Department of Dreams.'
Focusing on musicking, studies have highlighted the decisive role that music can play in imagining utopias (see Levitas, 2010), in fostering social change by means of disrupting established ways of being (see Turino 2016), or in constituting alternative modes of (political) belonging (see Stokes 2018). However, there is much more to be explored regarding the modes in which musicking fosters reinvention. Scholars across diverse disciplines, practitioners, sound-artists and composers all engaging with music in so many different ways, need more insights into the explicit and tacit ways in which musicking contributes to envisioning utopias. Sharing each one’s specific knowledge based on their practice and discipline-scope will enable a broader understanding of the topic.
This study day will explore and expand the field of scholarship concerning the study of music and the imaginary reconstitution of society.
Presentations are welcome on a diverse range of topics and approaches from an interdisciplinary standpoint to the broad themes of hope and societal reimagination. The study day will be organized around four key topics and related questions. We welcome proposals that address the following:
References
Levitas, Ruth (2010). "In eine bess’ re Welt entrückt: Reflections on Music and Utopia." Utopian Studies 21 (2): 215-231.
Stokes, Martin (2018). ‘The musical citizen’, Etnomüzikoloji Dergisi (Ethnomusicology Journal), 1 (2), pp. 95–109.
Turino, Thomas (2016), ‘Music, social change and alternative forms of citizenship.’ In D. J. Elliott, M. Silverman and W. D. Bowman (eds), Artistic Citizenship: Artistry, Social Responsibility and Ethical Praxis. Pp. 297–312. New York: Oxford University Press.
Proposals for contributions should be submitted here by 31 January 2023.
Notification of acceptance will be sent by 16 Μarch 2023. For questions you may contact: musicandutopiastudydaygmail.com
Registration will open soon.
Accepted Formats of Contributions
20’-Paper proposals: Abstracts of no more than 250 words and title. Please indicate a brief provisional bibliography along with the abstract (not included in the word-count). The name of the author and their email address should appear separately in a cover page.
90’-120’- Organised session proposals: Abstract of no more than 250 words outlining the proposal, and title. Abstracts of no more than 250 words for each contribution included, and title. Please indicate a brief provisional bibliography along with the abstract (not included in the word-count). The names of the proposers and each contributor and their email addresses should appear separately in a cover page.
Posters: This format is proposed particularly to encourage PG participation in the Study Day. Abstracts of no more than 250 words and title. The name of the author and their email address should appear separately in a cover page.
Note: Sound-artists and composers interested in presenting their work, should assume either of the accepted formats. They are strongly encouraged to reach out to the designated email address and discuss the details, so that any requirement can be worked out.
Organizing Committee
Chrysi Kyratsou (PhD student, QUB) and Matthew Warren (Dr, Independent scholar): lead organisers.
Ioannis Tsioulakis (Senior Lecturer, QUB), David Robb (Reader, QUB) and Franziska Schroeder (Professor, QUB): Academic mentors
Keynote Speakers, Roundtable and Live Act TBC