Rhythm Changes: Jazz and National Identities
Posted: October 13th, 2010 | Filed under: Calls for Papers | Comments Off on Rhythm Changes: Jazz and National Identities2-4 September 2011, Amsterdam
The first Rhythm Changes Conference will take place in September 2011 and will be hosted in partnership with the Conservatory of Amsterdam. The three-day Conference will explore the theme of ‘Jazz and National Identities’ and will include presentations from an international line up of jazz researchers.
Keynote Speakers
Professor Bruce Johnson (Universities of Macquarie, Turku and Glasgow)
Professor Ronald Radano (University of Wisconsin-Madison)
Conference outline
Throughout its history, jazz has played an important part in discourses about national identity, politics and cultural value; indeed, the music continues to play a complex role in the cultural life of nations worldwide. Within this context, jazz is an ideal cultural form from which to explore a number of critical questions bound up with national identity, from the development of national sounds and ensembles to the politics of migration and race, from the impact of globalisation and the hybridisation of musical styles to the creation of social institutions and distinct communities, from jazz’s shifting aesthetic status from popular to canonical ‘art’ music. Jazz has developed in a range of national settings through different influences and interactions, so is ideally placed to explore wider issues surrounding identity and inheritance, enabling unique perspectives on how culture is exchanged, adopted and transformed.
Call for papers
Rhythm Changes is a three day multi-disciplinary conference that brings together leading researchers in the fields of jazz studies, media and cultural studies. The Conference committee invites papers and panel proposals that feed into the Conference theme and is interested in featuring perspectives from a range of international contexts. Although not restricted to specific themes, possible topics could include:
- National identity and jazz
- Trans-national or post-national jazz sounds
- Jazz nationalism and nationalistic movements
- The musical McDonalds? Jazz and the politics of globalisation
- Migration and trans-cultural exchange
- Jazz as quintessentially American music
- Media dissemination and the spread of jazz culture
- Jazz as classical, folk or popular music
- Venues, festivals and the dynamics of culture
- Jazz and the cold war
- Exploring sonic identities (African American, the Nordic Tone, South African jazz)
- Jazz and ‘frontier’ myths
- National jazz criticism
- Jazz in urban and rural spaces
- Interrogating the ‘Afrological’ and ‘Eurological’
- Jazz racisms, censorship and propaganda
- Cultural memory and jazz
- National ensembles and/or trans-national collectives
- Postcolonial settings for jazz
- Origins, mythology and the construction of jazz history
- Modernism, postmodernism and jazz
The Conference committee welcomes individual papers and proposals for panels and round table discussions. For individual papers, abstracts of no more than 300 words should be submitted. Panels and round table proposals should include a session overview, participant biographies and description of individual contributions. Abstracts and proposals (as well as event queries) should be sent to Professor Walter van de Leur ([email protected]) by 25 February 2011.
Conference Committee
Nicholas Gebhardt (University of Lancaster), George McKay (University of Salford), Walter van de Leur (Conservatory of Amsterdam and University of Amsterdam), and Tony Whyton (University of Salford).
Keynote speaker biographies
Professor Bruce Johnson
Bruce Johnson’s work focuses on the history of the modern era as an acoustic phenomenon: the role of sound in the confrontations which generated modernity as mapped through such demarcations as class, gender, nation state and race. Johnson’s full career publication list runs to nearly 400 items, from encyclopedia entries to major reference works including The Oxford Companion to Australian Jazz (Nominated “Outstanding Academic Book. 1988-89” by the academic review Choice), and The Inaudible Music: Jazz, Gender and Australian Modernity (Currency 2000).
Professor Ronald Radano
Ronald Radano’s primary work is that of an Americanist with special interests in cultural theory, race, globalization, popular music and the history of North American black music. He is author and editor of three books, New Musical Figurations: Anthony Braxton’s Cultural Critique (1993), Music and Racial Imagination (2000; co-edited with Philip V. Bohlman) and Lying up a Nation: Race and Black Music (2003), all published by the University of Chicago Press.