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H-Announce CFP: Studies: An Interdisciplinary Conference on , its Music, and its Fans

Announcement published by Jacob Cohen on Friday, December 7, 2018 Type: Call for Papers Date: January 15, 2019 Location: Oregon, United States Subject Fields: Humanities, Music and Music History, American History / Studies, Sociology, Philosophy

Oregon State University is pleased to announce the first peer-reviewed academic conference devoted to the music and culture of the improvisational rock band Phish. The conference will take place on Oregon State’s campus in Corvallis, Oregon, May 17-19, 2019. For submission instructions and more information, go to http://blogs.oregonstate.edu/phish2019/. Abstracts are due no later than January 15, 2019.

For the past thirty-five years, Phish has been consistently building a fervent fan base and impressive live performance history, often working outside traditional avenues of the mainstream recording industry. They staged the world’s largest New Year’s Eve concert in December 1999 with a marathon seven-hour set, redefined the modern American , and performed a record-setting thirteen night run at New York’s without repeating a single song during the summer of 2017. Despite these achievements, Phish has received far less scholarly attention than many other acts in popular music.

Bringing scholars together from diverse academic disciplines, we welcome a wide range of methodological and theoretical approaches to the sonic, narrative, performative, visual, and cultural worlds of Phish, including but not limited to:

Music and Lyrics Compositional practice; Improvisational strategies; Band mythologies, including Gamehendge; Questions of genre; Historiography Elements of Live Performance Cover songs; Concert lighting; Venues; Fan space and place Fan Culture Fan communities (virtual, face-to-face); Fan art; Parking lots; Tape trading; Issues of race, gender, religion, sexuality, disability; Activism; Subcultural identities; Fan mythologies Business Business practices; Place within music industry; Tape trading; Early adoption of the internet; Media framing of Phish; Influence on American music festival culture; Influence on the genre Quantitative Analysis

Citation: Jacob Cohen. CFP: Phish Studies: An Interdisciplinary Conference on the Band, its Music, and its Fans. H-Announce. 12-07-2018. https://networks.h-net.org/node/73374/announcements/3320067/cfp-phish-studies-interdisciplinary-conference-band-its-music Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License. 1 H-Announce

Analyses of setlists, fan show ratings, tour itineraries

Please submit abstracts of 250-500 words for either (a) individual 20-minute papers or (b) 90-minute panel proposals (three presenters minimum). Complete panel proposals should include an abstract for each panelist’s contribution as well as a 250-word (max.) justification for the panel. We encourage proposals from scholars at any stage of their career, including graduate students as well as scholars outside of academia. Abstracts should specify the presenter’s methodological and theoretical approach, summarize conclusions, and specify the broader academic implications of the research.

Participants will have the opportunity to submit revised versions of their presentations for an edited volume following the conference.

Program committee:

Dr. Stephanie Jenkins, Committee Chair (Philosophy)

Dr. Christina Allaback (Theater Studies)

Dr. Jnan Ananda Blau (Communication Studies)

Dr. Jacob A. Cohen (Musicology)

Dr. Natalie Dollar (Speech Communication)

Dr. Paul Jakus (Economics)

Dr. Elizabeth Yeager (American Studies)

Contact Info:

Jacob A. Cohen, PhD

Instructional Technology Fellow, Macaulay Honors College, CUNY

Contact Email: [email protected]

Citation: Jacob Cohen. CFP: Phish Studies: An Interdisciplinary Conference on the Band, its Music, and its Fans. H-Announce. 12-07-2018. https://networks.h-net.org/node/73374/announcements/3320067/cfp-phish-studies-interdisciplinary-conference-band-its-music Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License. 2