[csaa-forum] Rescheduled: The Poetry and Poetics of Popular Culture online video conference, 25-26 November 2011.

Kit MacFarlane kit at sprawl.com.au
Sat Nov 5 09:38:45 CST 2011


Following requests from a number of conference participants and to
allow for more time for video preparation, The Poetry and Poetics of
Popular Culture online video conference has been rescheduled to 25-26
November.

Submissions will now be accepted until 17 November 2011.

Questions about the conference, submissions, or video preparations
should be sent to Dr Kit MacFarlane (kit.macfarlane at unisa.edu.au).

http://www.unisa.edu.au/cil/poetryandpoeticscentre/
http://resource.unisa.edu.au/course/view.php?id=3272

A revised call for papers can be found at
http://resource.unisa.edu.au/mod/resource/view.php?id=20414 and is
also included below:


'The Poetry and Poetics of Popular Culture'.

Call For Papers, Online Conference, 25-26 November 2011.
Hosted by the University of South Australia Poetry and Poetics Centre.

http://www.unisa.edu.au/cil/poetryandpoeticscentre/
http://resource.unisa.edu.au/course/view.php?id=3272


Organisers:

Dr Ioana Petrescu, Director, Poetry and Poetics Centre, UniSA

Dr Kit MacFarlane, Lecturer, CIL School, UniSA

Keynote Presenter:

Professor Kirpal Singh, Associate Professor of English Literature at
Singapore Management University.


The Poetry and Poetics Centre of the University of South Australia
invites video presentations to be part of an international online
conference entitled 'The Poetry and Poetics of Popular Culture', with
a desirable but not exclusive focus on the Australasian geographical
area.

'The Poetry and Poetics of Popular Culture' is seeking an eclectic
range of presentations on poetry and poetics and their relations and
connections to popular culture in all its forms.

As an influential and intellectual discourse, poetry's presence and
influence can be found in all forms of pop culture and everyday life,
from the general presence of poetry in popular film and TV, to the
role and presence of poets as characters, to the prominence of
particular poets in the popular realm, to the poetics of popular media
forms.

>From Star Trek to Rumpole of the Bailey, Aristotle's Poetics in The
Name of the Rose to James Franco as Allen Ginsberg in Howl, poetry
permeates the popular realm.

Similarly, pop culture is equally a presence in poetry, with poets
embracing not only its ubiquitous presence as a topic, but also
delving into its personal individual resonances, and embracing its
forms and structures.

'The Poetry and Poetics of Pop Culture' is an innovative online
conference, with international speakers providing pre-recorded video
presentations and featuring interactive online forums and chat-rooms
so that participants can view and respond to the presentations in the
comfort of their own homes and offices.


Video presentations can take any form the presenter chooses, full of
professional editing and flashy CGI or a traditional presentation
delivered straight to camera with a minimum of fuss. Participants are
welcome to take advantage of the video form, but no technical wizardry
is expected or required.



The only requirement is that video presentations run no longer than
fifteen minutes.


Once recorded, the videos should be sent to the conference organisers
to be made available for streamed viewing over the course of the
conference (25-26 November 2011).

'The Poetry and Poetics of Popular Culture' conference is partnered
with the journal 'Asiatic' (http://asiatic.iium.edu.my/),
editor-in-chief Associate Professor Mohammad A. Quayum, and presenters
will be able to submit written papers based on their video
presentations to the journal to be peer-reviewed for possible
publication.

We are proud to announce Professor Kirpal Singh as the Keynote Presenter.

Professor Singh is Associate Professor of English Literature &
Creative Thinking at Singapore Management University and Director of
the Wee Kim Wee Centre.

Registration for guests and presenters is $35, which includes full
access to all online presentations and resources, and participation in
the round table internet conference forum on Saturday 26 November
2011. Payment details will be provided shortly and also made available
on the Poetry and Poetics Centre website
(http://www.unisa.edu.au/cil/poetryandpoeticscentre/).


Video presentations should be submitted by 17 November 2011.
Presenters will be notified of acceptance shortly after submission.

For video submission details and other enquiries, please contact Dr
Kit MacFarlane (kit.macfarlane at unisa.edu.au).


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