
English Studies
February 3, 2025 at 12:42 PM
*Birmingham Centre for Media and Cultural Research invites you to the 2025 BCMCR conference “Transgressive Identities and Subjectivities”*
*Venue*: Parkside Building, Birmingham City University (and online)
*Date: *Tuesday 17^th and Wednesday 18^th June 2025
*Time: *9am-5.30pm both days
*Closing date for abstracts*: *7 February 2025, 23:59 (anywhere in the world).*
Abstracts of no more than 300 words for an individual presentation
(20mins + Q&A), or no more than 500 words for a panel proposal (60mins +Q&A) should be submitted as a Word document/PDF attachment via email to the conference organisers Dr Poppy Wilde [email protected]
and Dr Matt Grimes [email protected]
Please also submit a short bio (no more than 100 words) with your abstract
This conference seeks to highlight the impact of media, culture and
society in shaping transgressive identities and subjectivities. We use
these two terms, identities and subjectivities, to indicate the shifting
understandings of selfhood that occur across media and cultural studies,
in order to be attendant to the affects and effects that are shaped
beyond the individual.
Historically, transgression has been understood and positioned in terms of deviance and deviant behaviours. In discussing a deeper understanding of “transgression” Wolfreys (2008) posits that transgression is deeper than a form of deviance and instead “is the very pulse that constitutes our identities, and we would have no sense of our own subjectivity were it not for a constant, if discontinuous negotiation with the transgressive otherness by which we are formed and informed”.
Additionally, Jenks (2003) argues that “[t]ransgression is a deeply
reflexive act” that “serves as an extremely sensitive vector in
assessing the scope, direction and compass of any social theory.” In
doing so this allows individuals and communities to consider how media, culture and society empowers and enables people to move outside of the spaces of expected conformity, to deny and affirm different modes of being and selfhood.
Moreover, the debates surrounding transgressive identities and
subjectivities are not unidirectional; they are countered by forms of
resistance and that challenge dominant narratives of transgression.
Alongside these forms of resistance is a need to understand and
recognise the limitations of transgression, transgressive behaviours,
identities and subjectivities, where their cyclical and historically
fluid nature have in many ways become commodified and integrated into mainstream cultures.
We therefore see this conference as an opportunity to explore both the potentials and the limitations of transgression and transgression of “selfhood” in media, culture and society. This is particularly pertinent at present, where, in many parts of the world expressions of transgression are being stifled and stymied through acts of secular and religious laws.
Jenks, C (2003) /Transgression. /London: Routledge.
Wolfreys, J. (2008) /Transgression: Identity, Space, Time/. London:
Bloomsbury.
This conference aims to bring together perspectives to then inform an edited book proposal for the *BCMCR New Directions in Media and Cultural Research book series*
https://bcmcr%20new%20directions%20in%20media%20and%20cultural%20research%20book%20series/ published by Intellect.