CFP: "Popular Culture"
Second issue of helden.heroes.heros
Deadline: January 31, 2014
The second issue of e-journal helden.heroes.heros published at Freiburg University is going
to be concerned with the representation of the heroic in popular culture.
Though not exclusively Victorian in interest, contributions from the Victorian
community would be much appreciated.
CFP: “Popular Culture” – second issue of e-journal helden. heroes. héros.
Whether heroes of Antiquity such as Ulysses or Achilles,
biblical heroes like David or Judith, medieval folk heroes like Robin Hood or
Joan of Arc, heroes of national revolution such as Danton or Marat, literary
heroes and anti-heroes like Don Quijote or Faust or contemporary superheroes
such as Lara Croft or Batman, heroes and heroines were always used as canvas
and identificatory figures for individuals, social groups or societies as a whole.
Although a “postheroic age” is often postulated today,
one can perceive a new boom of the heroic not only but especially within
popular culture nowadays. Thereby, traditions are challenged by new types of
heroes and hybrid forms and processes of trivialisation and diffusion stand
alongside scepticism and taboos. helden.heroes.héros.
e-journal on cultures of the heroic, an open-access journal published by the
collaborative research center “Heroes – Heroization – Heroisms” at Freiburg
University is exploring this tension between exceptionality of heroic figures
and the social groups which they both stabilize and question.
Since the heroic can only ever be visible through
representation and groups of followers can only be constituted through the
medial dissemination of hero narratives, the second issue of the journal
(summer 2014) will be concerned with the issue of “Popular Culture”. The issue
will focus on figures, modes of presentation, media-specific phenomena and functions
of popular representations of the heroic. What are characteristics of popular
heroes? In which media are heroes and their heroic acts presented and who is
selecting them? Are there connections between today’s heroes and the folk
heroes of earlier times? These and similar questions should be discussed in the
submitted contributions.
The Call for Papers is directed at researchers from all
humanities and social sciences who are dealing with the representation of the
heroic in popular media – not only of the 20thand 21st century, but of all
ages. Contributions will be selected based on peer review and abstracts of 2000
characters (including spacing) as well as a short CV should be submitted until January
31, 2014 to: e-journal@sfb948.uni-freiburg.de
helden. heroes. héros.
e-journal on cultures of the heroic.