EMP Feminist Working Group Breakfast
Join Feminist Working Group organizers Tavia Nyong'o, Daphne Brooks, Sarah Dougher, Daphne Carr, Caroline O'Meara, and Ann Powers at a breakfast to welcome attendees and participants of the IASPM-US/EMP Pop Conference who are interested in intersectional study of gender, sexuality, music, and performance. We especially want to welcome first time attendees at the conference. 7:30-8:30am, Friday, March 23, 2012.
Location:
Tisch School of the Arts
721 Broadway, between Waverly Place and Washington Place, just south of Eighth Street.
The event will be on the MAIN FLOOR, the Commons area. (there was a room change for the better!) RSVP is closed. Just show up!
Sponsored by the New York University Music Department.
Working since 2007 to bring gender, sexuality, race, class and other intersections into the discussion about music at the Experience Music Project Pop Conference.
Thursday, March 15, 2012
2012 Intersectional Panels/Papers
Here is a list of intersectional gender/sexuality/queer theory/critical race theory/feminism oriented panels that we at the Feminist Working Group hope you will attend as part of the IASPM-US/EMP Pop Conference at NYU March 22-25.
Friday March 23
7:30-8:30am EMP Feminist Working Group Breakfast
Join Feminist Working Group organizers Tavia Nyong'o, Daphne Brooks, Sarah Dougher, Daphne Carr, Caroline O'Meara, and Ann Powers at a breakfast to welcome attendees and participants of the IASPM-US/EMP Pop Conference who are interested in intersectional study of gender, sexuality, music, and performance. We especially want to welcome first time attendees at the conference. 7:30-8:30am, Friday, March 23, 2012.
Location: Department of Performance Studies / Tisch School of the Arts is located at 721 Broadway, between Waverly Place and Washington Place, just south of Eighth Street. The event will be on the 6th floor. (You will need picture ID to enter the building). Sponsored by the New York University Music Department. RSVP: musicwriterFMW at gmail dot com
Roundtable: Feminist Musicking and Educational Activism in Urban Spaces
Lauren Onkey
LaRonda Davis
Karla Schickele
Maureen Mahon
Friday Papers
Gayle Wald, "'Deliver De Letter': 'Please Mr. Postman,' the Marvelettes, and the Afro-Caribbean Imaginary"
Wills Glasspiegel & Martin Scherzinger, "Beyoncé's Afro-Future: Power and Play in "Run the World (Girls)""
Rustem Ertug Altinay, "'In Konya she would marry a regular dude, but Serife from Konya is now a Lady': Power, Sexuality and Cities in Gungor Bayrak's Autobiographic Songs"
Summer Kim Lee, "'Singin' Up On You': Queer Intimacies of the Sonorous Body In 'The New Sound Karaoke'"
Daniel Sander, "Girl. Reverb. Notes on Queer Tactics of Sonorous Difference"
Kyessa L. Moore, "(Sub)Spacialized Urban Sound, Expressive Communion and Identificatory Dislocations"
Vivian L. Huang, "Not That Innocent: Britney Spears, Laurel Nakadate and Strangers"
Julia DeLeon, "Dance Through the Dark Night: Distance, Dissonance and Queer Belonging"
Summer Kim Lee, "'Singin' Up On You': Queer Intimacies of the Sonorous Body In 'The New Sound Karaoke'"
Daniel Sander, "Girl. Reverb. Notes on Queer Tactics of Sonorous Difference"
Kyessa L. Moore, "(Sub)Spacialized Urban Sound, Expressive Communion and Identificatory Dislocations"
Rachel Devitt, "I Love a (Pride) Parade: Queer Community-Building, Temporary Spaces and Politicized Kitsch among LGBT Marching Bands"
Evelyn McDonnell, "The Roads to Ruin"
Matthew Carrillo-Vincent, "Ears to the Streets, Peripheral Beats: The New Social Map of Backpack Rap"
Jacqueline Warwick, "'Bigger than Big and Smaller than Small': Child Stars, Street Urchins, and Little Orphan Annie"
Tracy McMullen, "In the Beginning, You Are There: Cloning Genesis and the Return of the Urbane"
Tavia Nyong'o, "Shame and Scandal and Zombies"
Karen Tongson, "Drive and Sounds of the '80s Metropolis"
Rebekah Farrugia & Kellie Hay, "'The Foundation' in Detroit: Challenging Conventional Ideologies about Sex and Gender in Hip Hop"
Denise Dalphond, "Eclecticism in Detroit: Diverse Dance Party Scenes in Electronic Music"
Carleton S. Gholz, "Remembering Rita: Sound, Sexuality, and Memory"
Saturday March 24
Roundtable: Violence Girl: East L.A. Rage to Hollywood Stage, A Chicana Punk Story -- a D.I.Y. "Archiverista" Conversation
Moderated by: Bibbe Hansen
Featuring:
Alice Velasquez
Sean Carrillo
Michelle Habell-Pallán
Saturday Papers
Andreana Clay, "Feelin' Mighty Real: Race, Space, and Identity in the Castro"
Mashadi Matabane, "'All the Women Are White, All the Blacks Are Men, But Some of Us Are Brave': The Cultural Politics of Black Women Musicians with an 'Axe' to Grind"
Laina Dawes, "'Black Metal is not for n@#$s, stupid b@#h!': Black Female Metal Fans' Inter/External Culture Clash"
Birgitta J. Johnson, "Women of the L.A. 'Undergrind': Female Artists Creating Alternatives to Mainstream Hip-hop's Plastic Ceiling"
Cookie Woolner, "'Ethel Must Not Marry': Black Swan Records and the Queer Classic Blues Women"
Roundtable: "Feminist and Queer Studies of Race in Sound"
This roundtable convenes two fields of scholarly inquiry—critical race studies and feminist theory/queer studies—to explore the following interrelated questions: How does sound construct racialized and gendered meaning and/or prompt processes of racial subjection? How might various hermeneutics of sound enrich and/or expand current ethnic and gender studies approaches to the study of racial formation? And how might we collectively forge a feminist, queer analytic for the study of racialized sound and sonic processes of racialization?
Moderated by: Kevin Fellezs
Featuring:
Kirstie Dorr
Roshanak Kheshti
Deborah Vargas
Lindsay Bernhagen, "'Everyone here is a little weird!': Gender and Musical Intersubjectivity at the Girlz Rhythm 'n' Rock Camp"
Maren Hancock, "Last Night a Shejay Saved My Life? Or, Do We Still Need Women Only Spaces to Nurture Female DJs?"
Marquita R. Smith, "Women of the City Underground: On Jean Grae's 'Tactical' Use of Mixtape Culture"
Daniel Party, "Chile's Revolution: Girl Style Now!"
Sara Marcus, "'Living in a Big Old City': Can Country Music's Urban/Rural Moral Binary Survive?"
Sunday March 25
Papers
Daphne A. Brooks, "'One of these mornings, you're gonna rise up singing': The Secret Black Feminist History of the Gershwins' Porgy and Bess "
Farah Jasmine Griffin, "Playing through the Changes: Mary Lou Williams' Manhattan"
Salamishah Tillet, "Bethlehem, Boardwalks, and the City of Brotherly Love: Nina Simone's Pre-Civil Rights Aesthetic"
Jayna Brown, "After the End of the World: Afro Diasporan Feminism and Alternative Dimensions of Sound"
Holly Hobbs, "Little Sparrows and Tender Maidens: Thoughts on Old and New World Balladry and Cautionary Tales"
Alison Fensterstock, "Fallen Angels: The Persistent Plotline of Woman's Ruin in Hip-Hop, Hair Metal and Beyond"
Holly George-Warren, "Dolly Does Deflowered Damsels: How Dolly Parton's Fallen-Woman Songcraft Took Her to the Top"
Julianne Escobedo Shepherd, "Cunt Music: When Vogue House Dips Meet Dipset"
Leah Tallen Branstetter, "Little Miss Swivel Hips 1957: In Search of the 'Female Elvis'"
Alexandra Apolloni, "Beat Girls and Dollybirds: Envoicing Swinging London"
Elizabeth Lindau, "'Mother Superior': Maternity as Performance Art in the Work of Yoko Ono"
Elizabeth Keenan, "Out in the Streets: 1960s Girl Groups and the Imagined Urban Space of New York City"
Sarah Dougher, "Making Noise in the Safe Space: How Girls' Rock Camps Make Place in the City"
Diane Pecknold, "The Spectral Cityscapes of Tween Pop"
Tim Lawrence, "Networking and Contact: Competing Forms of Queerness on the New York Dance Floor, 1980-88"
Jack Halberstam, "Losing Control: Grace Jones vs. Joy Division"
Lucy O'Brien, "Can I Have a Taste of Your Ice Cream? (Post punk feminism and the Yorkshire Ripper)"
Gillian Gower, "Riot Culture: Beats, Banksy, and the Bristol Sound"
Friday March 23
7:30-8:30am EMP Feminist Working Group Breakfast
Join Feminist Working Group organizers Tavia Nyong'o, Daphne Brooks, Sarah Dougher, Daphne Carr, Caroline O'Meara, and Ann Powers at a breakfast to welcome attendees and participants of the IASPM-US/EMP Pop Conference who are interested in intersectional study of gender, sexuality, music, and performance. We especially want to welcome first time attendees at the conference. 7:30-8:30am, Friday, March 23, 2012.
Location: Department of Performance Studies / Tisch School of the Arts is located at 721 Broadway, between Waverly Place and Washington Place, just south of Eighth Street. The event will be on the 6th floor. (You will need picture ID to enter the building). Sponsored by the New York University Music Department. RSVP: musicwriterFMW at gmail dot com
Roundtable: Feminist Musicking and Educational Activism in Urban Spaces
Lauren Onkey
LaRonda Davis
Karla Schickele
Maureen Mahon
Friday Papers
Gayle Wald, "'Deliver De Letter': 'Please Mr. Postman,' the Marvelettes, and the Afro-Caribbean Imaginary"
Wills Glasspiegel & Martin Scherzinger, "Beyoncé's Afro-Future: Power and Play in "Run the World (Girls)""
Rustem Ertug Altinay, "'In Konya she would marry a regular dude, but Serife from Konya is now a Lady': Power, Sexuality and Cities in Gungor Bayrak's Autobiographic Songs"
Summer Kim Lee, "'Singin' Up On You': Queer Intimacies of the Sonorous Body In 'The New Sound Karaoke'"
Daniel Sander, "Girl. Reverb. Notes on Queer Tactics of Sonorous Difference"
Kyessa L. Moore, "(Sub)Spacialized Urban Sound, Expressive Communion and Identificatory Dislocations"
Vivian L. Huang, "Not That Innocent: Britney Spears, Laurel Nakadate and Strangers"
Julia DeLeon, "Dance Through the Dark Night: Distance, Dissonance and Queer Belonging"
Summer Kim Lee, "'Singin' Up On You': Queer Intimacies of the Sonorous Body In 'The New Sound Karaoke'"
Daniel Sander, "Girl. Reverb. Notes on Queer Tactics of Sonorous Difference"
Kyessa L. Moore, "(Sub)Spacialized Urban Sound, Expressive Communion and Identificatory Dislocations"
Rachel Devitt, "I Love a (Pride) Parade: Queer Community-Building, Temporary Spaces and Politicized Kitsch among LGBT Marching Bands"
Evelyn McDonnell, "The Roads to Ruin"
Matthew Carrillo-Vincent, "Ears to the Streets, Peripheral Beats: The New Social Map of Backpack Rap"
Jacqueline Warwick, "'Bigger than Big and Smaller than Small': Child Stars, Street Urchins, and Little Orphan Annie"
Tracy McMullen, "In the Beginning, You Are There: Cloning Genesis and the Return of the Urbane"
Tavia Nyong'o, "Shame and Scandal and Zombies"
Karen Tongson, "Drive and Sounds of the '80s Metropolis"
Rebekah Farrugia & Kellie Hay, "'The Foundation' in Detroit: Challenging Conventional Ideologies about Sex and Gender in Hip Hop"
Denise Dalphond, "Eclecticism in Detroit: Diverse Dance Party Scenes in Electronic Music"
Carleton S. Gholz, "Remembering Rita: Sound, Sexuality, and Memory"
Saturday March 24
Roundtable: Violence Girl: East L.A. Rage to Hollywood Stage, A Chicana Punk Story -- a D.I.Y. "Archiverista" Conversation
Moderated by: Bibbe Hansen
Featuring:
Alice Velasquez
Sean Carrillo
Michelle Habell-Pallán
Saturday Papers
Andreana Clay, "Feelin' Mighty Real: Race, Space, and Identity in the Castro"
Mashadi Matabane, "'All the Women Are White, All the Blacks Are Men, But Some of Us Are Brave': The Cultural Politics of Black Women Musicians with an 'Axe' to Grind"
Laina Dawes, "'Black Metal is not for n@#$s, stupid b@#h!': Black Female Metal Fans' Inter/External Culture Clash"
Birgitta J. Johnson, "Women of the L.A. 'Undergrind': Female Artists Creating Alternatives to Mainstream Hip-hop's Plastic Ceiling"
Cookie Woolner, "'Ethel Must Not Marry': Black Swan Records and the Queer Classic Blues Women"
Roundtable: "Feminist and Queer Studies of Race in Sound"
This roundtable convenes two fields of scholarly inquiry—critical race studies and feminist theory/queer studies—to explore the following interrelated questions: How does sound construct racialized and gendered meaning and/or prompt processes of racial subjection? How might various hermeneutics of sound enrich and/or expand current ethnic and gender studies approaches to the study of racial formation? And how might we collectively forge a feminist, queer analytic for the study of racialized sound and sonic processes of racialization?
Moderated by: Kevin Fellezs
Featuring:
Kirstie Dorr
Roshanak Kheshti
Deborah Vargas
Lindsay Bernhagen, "'Everyone here is a little weird!': Gender and Musical Intersubjectivity at the Girlz Rhythm 'n' Rock Camp"
Maren Hancock, "Last Night a Shejay Saved My Life? Or, Do We Still Need Women Only Spaces to Nurture Female DJs?"
Marquita R. Smith, "Women of the City Underground: On Jean Grae's 'Tactical' Use of Mixtape Culture"
Daniel Party, "Chile's Revolution: Girl Style Now!"
Sara Marcus, "'Living in a Big Old City': Can Country Music's Urban/Rural Moral Binary Survive?"
Sunday March 25
Papers
Daphne A. Brooks, "'One of these mornings, you're gonna rise up singing': The Secret Black Feminist History of the Gershwins' Porgy and Bess "
Farah Jasmine Griffin, "Playing through the Changes: Mary Lou Williams' Manhattan"
Salamishah Tillet, "Bethlehem, Boardwalks, and the City of Brotherly Love: Nina Simone's Pre-Civil Rights Aesthetic"
Jayna Brown, "After the End of the World: Afro Diasporan Feminism and Alternative Dimensions of Sound"
Holly Hobbs, "Little Sparrows and Tender Maidens: Thoughts on Old and New World Balladry and Cautionary Tales"
Alison Fensterstock, "Fallen Angels: The Persistent Plotline of Woman's Ruin in Hip-Hop, Hair Metal and Beyond"
Holly George-Warren, "Dolly Does Deflowered Damsels: How Dolly Parton's Fallen-Woman Songcraft Took Her to the Top"
Julianne Escobedo Shepherd, "Cunt Music: When Vogue House Dips Meet Dipset"
Leah Tallen Branstetter, "Little Miss Swivel Hips 1957: In Search of the 'Female Elvis'"
Alexandra Apolloni, "Beat Girls and Dollybirds: Envoicing Swinging London"
Elizabeth Lindau, "'Mother Superior': Maternity as Performance Art in the Work of Yoko Ono"
Elizabeth Keenan, "Out in the Streets: 1960s Girl Groups and the Imagined Urban Space of New York City"
Sarah Dougher, "Making Noise in the Safe Space: How Girls' Rock Camps Make Place in the City"
Diane Pecknold, "The Spectral Cityscapes of Tween Pop"
Tim Lawrence, "Networking and Contact: Competing Forms of Queerness on the New York Dance Floor, 1980-88"
Jack Halberstam, "Losing Control: Grace Jones vs. Joy Division"
Lucy O'Brien, "Can I Have a Taste of Your Ice Cream? (Post punk feminism and the Yorkshire Ripper)"
Gillian Gower, "Riot Culture: Beats, Banksy, and the Bristol Sound"
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)