School of English, Communications and Performance Studies, Monash University  show

School of English, Communications and Performance Studies, Monash University

Summary: Podcasts of conferences, seminars and events hosted by the School of English, Communications and Performance Studies, Monash University

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  • Artist: School of English, Communications and Performance Studies, Monash University
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 A Mad Scenography! | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:05:34

Michael Coe discussed the scenography of "Eight Songs for a Mad King".

 Work on TV | Melissa Gregg | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 1:31:42

Moving beyond the established benchmarks of crime, law and medicine, the past ten years has seen an expansion in the number of workplaces depicted as prime time television entertainment. Not only have these shows created new opportunities for empathy with employees at the front line of the service industry (airlines, beauty, and border security, for example) they have positioned the viewer as a knowing insider to an ever greater range of jobs beyond their own training and expertise – an extension of what John Hartley calls television’s ‘cross-demographic’ function. From the White House to the underworld, the kitchen to the office park, work on TV has been one of the most successful of recent television genres, reaching its zenith in a suite of programs that have dramatised the art of TV production itself. Curb Your Enthusiasm, Entourage, 30 Rock, Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip and Extras all base their appeal on familiarity with the routines of the cultural industries and the vicissitudes of portfolio careers, providing fresh possibilities for TV content in the process. Coming at a time of increased union activity with the 2007 writers’ strike and its associated publicity, these programs deliberately confused insider/outsider status: viewers were invited to identify not only with the fate of creative talent but also the challenges they posed to management. This paper suggests that on the surface these shows can be read as evidence of a new style of labour politics befitting the creative economy, where narcissistic self-representations are used to articulate and justify a devalued work ethic. Yet in a post-broadcast era, they might also be regarded as a last-ditch attempt on behalf of a vulnerable industry to gain the support of an audience with little compulsion to remain loyal to its offerings.

 Panel Discussion | Narelle Harris | File Type: audio/x-mp3 | Duration: 53:20

Vampires, Vamps and Va Va Voom | Narelle Harris Panel Discussion An open discussion, with Narelle Harris, author of vampire novel set in Melbourne, The Opposite of Life; Laura Jane Maher; and Odette Kelada.

 Dracula (1979) as Paranormal Romance | Patrick Spedding | File Type: audio/x-mp3 | Duration: 48:33

Vampires, Vamps and Va Va Voom | Patrick Spedding Dracula (1979) as Paranormal Romance John Badham's Dracula (1979) has been described as a very romantic interpretation of the Bram Stoker's story, even the first Romantic interpretation of Dracula on screen. Frank Langella, who plays the eponymous hero, maintained that the defining feature of his Dracula was his refusal to be filmed biting necks and drinking blood. He wouldn't wear fangs, tattered funereal garb, pale face makeup, or contact lenses that changed the appearance of his eyes: he wanted to appear on screen as the impeccably-dressed lover of his victims, not their haggard destroyer. But there is more to a romantic narrative, especially a Paranormal Romance, than an impeccable smile and a clear shirt-front; and though the studio, director and writer of this film were sympathetic to Langella's "vision", each had different ideas about how to realize it on film. This paper will examine the main romance elements of Badham's Dracula, comparing them to typical elements in Paranormal Romance fiction, to assess whether the film succeeds a romance narrative or a horror story with a romantic sub-plot. Patrick Spedding is the author of A Bibliography of Eliza Haywood (2004) and the editor of Script & Print. He is an ARC-funded Research Fellow in the Daprtment of English at Monash University. His research project is an examination of the production and distribution of erotica in England in the eighteenth-century.

 Undead Romance Writers | Rebecca Do Rozario | File Type: audio/x-mp3 | Duration: 38:41

Vampires, Vamps and Va Va Voom | Rebecca Do Rozario Undead Romance Writers This paper examines the embedding of vampire romance writers in Tanya Huff’s ‘blood noun’1 and Katie McAlister’s Dark Ones series. The use of a vampire as a first person narrator in Anne Rice’s work helped establish a new trend of construction of the sympathetic vampire, but whether as first person narrators or characters in someone else’s first person narration, today’s vampire romance writer serves not to create a sense of empathy with the reader by ostensibly writing the book in their hands, but to actually construct the reader as a particular consumer of vampire romance. This reader, engaged in negotiating believability or suspension of disbelief necessary to their position, remains conscious of the female author of the novel, but is also lead down the garden path by the potential metafictional, male vampire romance writer. The paper will discuss the gendered implications of the reader’s position and the metafictional inflections inherent in constructing undead romance writers. Dr. Rebecca-Anne C. Do Rozario lectures in children’s and fantasy literature at Monash University. She has published in journals such as Women’s Studies in Communication, theatre journal and Children’s Literature Studies.

 The Mother is a Vamp: Explorations in the Mommy-lilt Faction of Paranormal Romance | Michelle De Stefani | File Type: audio/x-mp3 | Duration: 31:12

Vampires, Vamps and Va Va Voom | Michelle De Stefani The Mother is a Vamp: explorations into the Mommy-lit faction of Paranormal Romance What do you get if you cross a working-class, forty-something-year-old single mother with a blood-sucking vampire? A whole lot, in fact. The ‘Mommy-lit’ hybrid of Vampire Romance fiction provides a novel platform for discussions of female subjectivity, constructions of motherhood and paranormal twists on the notion of the ‘traditional family’. This paper engages predominately with Michele Bardsley’s Broken Heart series as an inlet into social and psychoanalytic critique of this emerging trend in contemporary romance fiction. It is observed that Vampire Mommy-lit functions as a discourse of patriarchal resistance by embracing the mother-daughter plot as essential female experience, thereby relegating the female’s dependence on males and children to the periphery. The gothic fantasy of ‘the Mother as Vampire’ serves as an inlet back to preoedipal experience, providing a subversion of existing mother-archetypes and new representations of mothering. Michelle De Stefani is a Bachelor of Arts (Honours) graduate in the Department of English and is currently completing a Bachelor of Laws at Monash University. Her research interests include Children’s literature and childhood studies, Victorian Literature, popular and visual culture.

 Consuming Passions: Vampires, Hunger and Sexuality | Deb Watson | File Type: audio/x-mp3 | Duration: 37:44

Vampires, Vamps and Va Va Voom | Deb Watson Consuming Passions: Vampires, Hunger and Sexuality The figure of the praying mantis, the monstrously sexual female who consumes her male mate at the height of the mating ritual, has underpinned constructions of female sexuality for centuries. Related to this has been a male fear of female consumption that implicitly links the act of eating to the sexually devouring woman. Susan Bordo demonstrates how the resultant repression and ideological control of female hunger promotes disordered a body image and leads to eating disorders such as anorexia nervosa and bulimia. The vampiric drinking of blood, particularly by the female, has traditionally been rendered highly sexual, and although her victim is not necessarily male, the female vampire’s eating is a form of literal, sexualised consumption, reproducing the figure of the hungering, desiring woman as sexually voracious man-eater. I will also consider the representations of female hunger and sexuality in the Buffy the Vampire Slayer television series, Keri Arthur’s “Riley Jensen” novels and Gerry Bartlett’s Real Vampires series, and demonstrate that Buffy and Riley Jensen perpetuate anxieties about female desire, and undermine the empowering narratives they offer. Arthur’s series also portrays a female sexuality which is always consenting to sex and thus contributes to the rape myths which prevent victims from obtaining convictions in court. By contrast, Bartlett’s series grapples body image issues head-on and in fact undermines some of the anxieties about weight which lead to eating disorders and avoids portraying a monstrous female sexuality. Thus it is Bartlett’s heroine, the insecure vampire who overcomes her fears to save the day who ultimately offers the most positive narrative. Deb Watson is working on her PhD on football culture and sexual assault at Monash University. She recently published in The Australian Feminist Law Journal and presented a paper on the male footballer’s body at Cardiff University.

 Possessing and Consuming Desire: Vampires as Metaphor | Melanie Burns | File Type: audio/x-mp3 | Duration: 32:06

Vampires, Vamps and Va Va Voom | Melanie Burns Possessing and Consuming Desire: Vampire as Metaphor Traditionally a taboo topic, sexuality is surrounded with euphemisms. Mainstream romance novels are rife with metaphorical references to the sexual act which may act as a powerful conduit of ideological impact, structuring reality in certain ways and making it difficult to view the world in other ways (Fairclough, 1992: 195, 208). For example, George Lakoff (1987: 409-412) notes that metaphorical categories of lust - lust is a game, lust is hunger, a lustful person is an animal - overlap with those of anger, leading him to suggest that “sex and violence may be linked in the mind via these metaphors” (p. 412). In a similar manner, vampirism and sexuality evoke common metaphors: consumption, possession, compulsion and so on. Comparing vampire literature with more mainstream romantic fiction, I will argue that the two genres both use similar metaphorical constructions of sexuality, most notably ‘sex as possession’ and ‘sex as joining’. Indeed, the use of the paranormal as a narrative device may itself be viewed as a metaphor for human desire. The impact of such linguistic structuring is discussed with reference to dominance/submission, activity/reactivity, and female agency, and the potential effect on broader constructions of sexuality is broached. Melanie Burns (BLitt (Hons), BBNSc) is a PhD candidate in the Linguistics program at Monash University. Her research interests include taboo, offensive language and swearing, gender and language, discourse analysis, the psychology of language, and the language of the media. Her doctoral research centres on the discursive construction of sexuality in media texts.

 Corporeal Integrity and Reviving Romantic Bodies | Odette Kelada | File Type: audio/x-mp3 | Duration: 24:55

Vampires, Vamps and Va Va Voom | Odette Kelada Carmilla: corporeal integrity and reviving romantic bodies This paper discusses the iconic lesbian vampire story of Carmilla, written in 1872 and explores how a positive reading of the text as paranormal romance may render it both an empowering and subversive queer romance narrative. While vampire mythology may be portrayed as horror, there is often a strong romantic narrative running in tandem with the terror. In classic gothic literature, the romance is often struck moreover between the romantic heroine and the 'monster'. This close positioning of the horror narrative and the romance narrative in the myth creates a provocative tension where the erotic potential of abject love and demonic seduction, gives voice to a generative and liberating space of desire and resistance. While in Carmilla, such potential may ultimately be contained in traditional frameworks, the reading of Carmilla as a ‘love story’, indicates the potency of reviving the romantic in subjugated bodies and transgressive sexualities. Odette Kelada has completed a PhD from Charles Sturt University on Australian women writers. She is currently working at Monash University as a Research Associate for Prof. Rachel Fensham on a three-year ARC Discovery grant project on ‘Transnational and cross-cultural choreographies’. She also teaches in various literature subjects at Monash and has taught and guest lectured in politics at Melbourne University. Her areas of interest include feminism, post-colonial theory, literature, critical whiteness studies and cultural history.

 ‘I think the thrall has gone out of our relationship’: Buffy and Dracula; A Parodic Adventure in Romance | Sian Mitchell | File Type: audio/x-mp3 | Duration: 39:46

Vampires, Vamps and Va Va Voom | Sian Mitchell “I think the thrall has gone out of our relationship”: Buffy and Dracula - a parodic adventure in romance The first episode of season 5 Buffy the Vampire Slayer the television series sees Buffy come up against arguably the most famous vampire in the literary and cultural world, Dracula. The relationship formed between the ‘The Chosen One’ and ‘Prince of Darkness’ is an exercise in parody, a meeting between modern literature and post-modern television, a comment on the past and present through the romance and rejection of these two characters. Using the definition of romance as the ‘lure of the quest’ (Sorenson, 2004) this paper analyses the relationship between Buffy and Dracula as a rewriting of the modern romance associated with the literary version of the vampire through the post-modern lens of television and parody. Through the analysis of key scenes, I will argue that this episode turns Bram Stoker’s story on its head, undermining the seduction and preternatural masculinity that Dracula offers (to all the Scooby Gang, not just Buffy!), through the sardonic wit that has become associated with Buffy the series. Their relationship not only leads Buffy to question her own existence as a slayer (a criticism repeatedly aimed at this particular episode), but also subverts, and at times confuses, gender roles, a convention commonly linked with the post-modern romance. More broadly, associated erotic relationships within the episode, such as that between Dracula and Xander, will also be approached to further elucidate the post-modern nature of this episode with regard to romance. Sian Mitchell is a PhD candidate in Film and Television Studies at Monash University. Her thesis is entitled “Human Nature: Psychoanalysis, Identity, and Cinema in the films of Charlie Kaufman, Spike Jonze and Michel Gondry.”

 A Discussion of Horror Films | Phillippe Met | File Type: audio/x-mp3 | Duration: 52:18

Vampires, Vamps and Va Va Voom | Phillippe Met A Discussion of Horror Films with Philippe Met Adrian Martin chairs a talk and discussion with Philippe Met about horror film. Group discussion not included in this recording, just the talk. Despite the rise of academic interest in vampires in popular culture, vampire romance has been largely ignored. From Dracula (1897) to Buffy the Vampire Slayer (1997–2003), romance themes have been inextricably linked to vampire narratives and the image of the vampire more broadly. Due to the commercial success of the emerging sub-genre ‘Paranormal Romance’, there has been increasing utilisation of vampire romance and related themes in other genres (such as contemporary fiction, young adult fiction and horror). Contemporary feminist scholars have not reflected upon this recent phenomenon despite the pioneering studies of Tania Modleski (1982), Janice Radway (1987) and Linda Christian-Smith (1990). The two-day symposium is an opportunity for scholars to discuss and critically examine the impact of the Undead upon the romance genre and the burgeoning industry created in its wake.

 Playing Vampire Cool: The Strange Postmodern Romances of Michael Almereyda’s Nadja (1994) | Adrian Martin | File Type: audio/x-mp3 | Duration: 40:00

Vampires, Vamps and Va Va Voom | Adrian Martin Playing Vampire Cool: The Strange Postmodern Romances of Michael Almereyda’s Nadja (1994) and Abel Ferrara’s The Addiction (1995) Since at least the 1950s, popular culture has deployed various figures, types and tropes of the supernatural or fantastique – aliens, zombies, ghosts, vampires, body-snatchers, etc – as metaphors for common human and political problems: alienation, non-communication, social exclusion, and so on. From the 1980s, and the popular spread of postmodern cultural sensibilities, this metaphoric work on the supernatural (whether conscious or unconscious, latent or manifest) takes a highly ‘second degree’, self-conscious, and frequently comic (or camp), turn. Nadja and The Addiction, two important, ingeniously stylised films of the mid ‘90s by key figures of American independent cinema, re-introduce a definite seriousness into this cultural discussion. Vampiric romance comes to mean many things in these films: on the one hand, for Almereyda, a metaphor for ‘Generation X’ lifestyles and interpersonal relationships; for Ferrara, a vehicle to channel the unspeakable horrors of the 20th century. I want to look at the ambience of ‘vampire cool’ in these grandly self-conscious but deadly earnest movies, and in particular at how this is ‘played’ or performed by the actors, including Christopher Walken, Elina Lowensöhn and Lili Taylor. The talk will be illustrated by several film clips. Dr. Adrian Martin is Senior Research Fellow in Film and Television Studies, Monash University. He is the author of Phantasms (Penguin 1994), Once Upon a Time in America (British Film Institute 1997), The Mad Max Movies (Currency 2003), Raúl Ruiz: sublimes obsesiones (Altamira 2004) and ¿Que es el cine moderno? (Uqbar 2008), and Co-Editor of Movie Mutations (BFI 2003) and the on-line film journal Rouge (www.rouge.com.au).

 Conformity through Transgression: An Examination of the Proliferation of Vampires within Online Cultures | Kirsten Stevens | File Type: audio/x-mp3 | Duration: 20:55

Vampires, Vamps and Va Va Voom | Kirsten Stevens Conformity through transgression: An examination of the proliferation of vampires within online cultures From its long forgotten origins in the folklore of Eastern Europe, the Vampire has been held as something to be feared, something existing beyond the limits of the social system. A monster, hiding in the dark, it disturbs and transgresses the boundaries of social order, existing, as Veronica Hollinger suggests, as “the monster that used to be human… the undead that used to be alive; it is the monster that looks like us.”(1997: 201) Breaking the boundaries which so define western conceptions of the self and the body, notions of the human and of inevitable mortality; the vampire is a creature who in its very nature exits at the limit. In his book Neo-Baroque, Omar Calabrese investigates further those aspects which disturb and destroy the boundaries of a social system, in particular those resulting in eccentricity and excess. Associated with those values that Calabrese finds most de-stabilising, concepts of sex, violence and the monster, the Vampire is permanently located at and beyond the limit of the socially acceptable. In light of this, it is then interesting that the vampire has more recently been integrated into the very heart of social ritual and community. This phenomenon has most visibly taken place in the setting of online communities, and most recently in the case of the Facebook online network. This paper addresses how members of online communities utilise this transgressive creature to entrench themselves within a social network and the irony implicit in this. It will take as a case study the Facebook online community and its Vampire and Slayer applications, where members are encouraged to fulfil the common folkloric tale of the Vampire reeking havoc on their friends and in the neighbourhoods they inhabited in life. I will also investigate how the very nature of the online identity can be seen to reflect notions of the Vampire, in particular theories of shape-shifting, gender play and the performance of sexuality. Kirsten Stevens is a first year PhD student at Monash University, studying in the Department of Film and Television studies. She is currently researching the Public exhibition of Alternative cinema within the recent Australian context, following completing her Honours Thesis on Apocalyptic themes and imagery within contemporary culture.

 Fantasising Masculinity in Buffyverse Slash Fiction: Sexuality Violence, and the Vampire | Virginia Keft-Kennedy | File Type: audio/x-mp3 | Duration: 41:18

Vampires, Vamps and Va Va Voom | Virginia Keft-Kennedy Fantasising Masculinity in Buffyverse Slash Fiction: Sexuality, Violence, and the Vampire The phenomenon of homoerotic fiction known as 'slash' is a form of fan-generated erotic literature which centres on the relationship between two or more same sex characters appropriated from the realm of popular television. This paper concentrates specifically on the slash fictions derived from Joss Whedon's cult television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer and its spin-off Angel. In particular, it explores the ways in which the authors of "Buffyverse" slash discursively conceptualise masculinity, male desire, and sexuality. My chief concern here is to examine how masculinity is constructed and constituted at a textual level through the trope of the vampiric. In doing so, I address the complex issues surrounding the ways in which writers of slash convey the figure of the vampire through the lenses of romance, sexual violence, and homosocial bonding in the representation of the television series two vampire protagonists, Angel and Spike. Virginia Keft-Kennedy holds a PhD from the University of Wollongong, NSW Australia. Her research focuses on the representation of gender and sexuality in popular culture with a particular emphasis on the dancing body. Virginia recently published her article “‘How does she do that?’ Belly Dancing and the Horror of a Flexible Woman” in Women’s Studies (Vol 34, No.3-4, 2005: 279-300). Her other research interests include the intersections between gender and race in literature, theories of the grotesque, queer theory and sexuality studies, popular culture and television studies, and vampire studies.

 Having it both ways: The Queering of Heteronormative Romance | Laura Jane Maher | File Type: audio/x-mp3 | Duration: 21:55

Vampires, Vamps and Va Va Voom | Laura Jane Maher Having it both ways: the queering of heteronormative romance The simultaneous desire for and repugnance with Otherness serves to inform its status as erotic. Within the realm of supernatural fictions, Vampires encapsulate this heightened sexualisation by traversing the dangerous in-betweens of twilight and dawn, the undead and the demonic-human. The Vampire character provides a human reader with an identifiable and containable image of desire corporealised. However in doing so these characters actively defy the conventions of heteronormativity by flouting the social constructs relating to gender as power and role descriptive. In this paper I will address the means by which vampire romances catering to a young adult readership interrogate the morality of queered sexuality and contrast this with adult romances which provide a queered space for erotic motif to develop without the need for ethical interrogation of sexuality within the narrative. Laura-Jane Maher is an Honours student with the School of English, Communication and Performance Studies at Monash University, having graduated from a combined bachelors’ degree in Law and Performing Arts in 2006. Her current research focuses on the story telling process within the legal system, both the stories told within the legal system and the means by which narrative tradition underwrites legal structure. She has previously presented “Passionate Trousers: An exploration of erotic motif and sexual pedagogy in the Harry Potter novels” (2007) and is beginning to see a theme here…

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