Queer Screen Cultures

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    Queer Screen Cultures

    University of Nottingham

    5 May 2009

    Queer Screen Cultures was an interdisciplinary postgraduate study day held at the

    University of Nottingham on May 5th 2009 in association with the MeCCSA

    Postgraduate Network. It was devised with the aim of bringing together researchers from

    across the UK who deal with issues of queer visibility and representation, and so makinglinks across the disciplines and across the academic spectrum.

    There has been a perceptible alteration in media representations of queer sexualities since

    the 1990s, on a global scale. The cultural visibility of queers has increased exponentially,

    with lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender characters now routinely populating film,

    television and other digital media, and the mainstream press frequently covering gay andlesbian stories as a matter of course. This interdisciplinary event seeks to explore

    representations and negotiations of queerness in contemporary screen cultures, as well astheir determinants, in addition to interrogating recent queer readings and reclamations

    of earlier screen texts. Supporting scholars from film and media studies, sociology,

    politics and cultural studies among other disciplines, the event covered a number ofthemes and issues pertaining to on screen queer visibility including:

    Cultural mainstreaming and the political contexts of queer visibility;

    Film-making and queer aesthetics;

    Queer audiences and participatory cultures: for example,L Wordtheme parties;

    On-screen intersections of queerness and other identities: gender, ethnicity, etc; Queer reclamations of ostensibly non-queer films, television programmes, and

    other texts;

    Textual poaching, queer appropriations and slash fictions;

    Queer adaptations;

    Trans and genderqueer visibility: representations and marginalisation;

    National and regional queer identities in cinema and media; The impact of digitisation and the multi-platform environment on queer visibility;

    Internet technologies and queer self-fashioning: YouTube and other online

    broadcasting.

    Gary Needham of Nottingham Trent University, author of the forthcoming Queer TV, andDr Michele Aaron of the University of Birmingham, editor ofNew Queer Cinema,

    delivered the plenary lectures. There was also a roundtable discussion which brought

    together both speakers and delegates to debate the cultural mainstreaming of queerness.

    > Access the 'Queer Screen Cultures' website for the details, programme and abstracts of

    the event

    http://queerscreencultures.org/http://queerscreencultures.org/http://queerscreencultures.org/http://queerscreencultures.org/