[Englecturers] FYI: Reading the Sopranos (5/31/05; collection)

englecturers at lists.ucr.edu englecturers at lists.ucr.edu
Wed Apr 20 12:52:16 PDT 2005


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From: owner-cfp at lists.sas.upenn.edu [mailto:owner-cfp at lists.sas.upenn.edu]
On Behalf Of David Lavery
Sent: Sunday, April 17, 2005 4:24 AM
To: UPenn
Subject: CFP: Reading the Sopranos (5/31/05; collection)


CALL FOR PAPERS: Reading The Sopranos: Is This the End of Tony Soprano?

http://mtsu32.mtsu.edu:11072/Reading_Sopranos/

Edited by David Lavery, Middle Tennessee State University

The editor of an in-development collection of essays on the HBO drama The 
Sopranos, commissioned for inclusion in I. B. Tauris' "Reading Contemporary 
Television" series (edited by Janet McCabe and Kim Akass), seeks your 
proposals.

Since its debut on HBO in 1999, The Sopranos has been one of the most talked

about series in the history of television. In 2002, the advent of the fourth

season of the show famously described by The New York Times as the most 
important work of American popular culture in fifty years produced a number
of 
books (visit the website to find a bibliography), including my own This
Thing 
of Ours (Wallflower, Columbia U P). Since then, however, The Sopranos has 
occasioned minimal critical/scholarly interest; only one book, Greene and 
Vernezze's "Popular Culture and Philosophy" volume, has been published.

With David Chase's masterful series now about to come to an end (Season Six,

though not yet definitively scheduled, will almost certainly air sometime in

2006), the time is ripe to revisit The Sopranos, assessing the series as a 
whole just prior to its final run-just as Akass and McCabe's Reading Sex and

the City did with another popular HBO series.

This collection will be aimed at an educated but not highly-specialized 
audience. The essays chosen for the volume will be scholarly but not
obscure, 
knowledgeable but not erudite. They should demonstrate knowledge and
awareness 
of the already published scholarship on The Sopranos.

A suggestive but not exclusionary list of topics can be found on the book 
website: http://mtsu32.mtsu.edu:11072/Reading_Sopranos/.

ASAP, but by no later than the end of May 2005, please send either your 
completed essay or a 500-750 word account of the essay you would like to 
contribute as an e-mail attachment (in Word or as a Rich Text File) to 
david.lavery at gmail.com. Be sure to include with your proposal a brief bio of

yourself. If your essay is chosen for final consideration, you will have
until 
the end of the summer to complete it.

David Lavery is the author of over ninety published essays and reviews and 
author/editor/co-editor of ten published or forthcoming books: Late for the 
Sky: The Mentality of the Space Age (Southern Illinois U P, 1992), Full of 
Secrets: Critical Approaches to Twin Peaks (Wayne State U P, 1994), 'Deny
All 
Knowledge': Reading The X-Files (Syracuse U P, 1996), Fighting the Forces: 
What's at Stake in Buffy the Vampire Slayer (Rowman & Littlefield, 2002), 
Teleparody: Predicting/Preventing the TV Discourse of Tomorrow (Wallflower, 
Columbia U P, 2002), This Thing of Ours: Investigating The Sopranos 
(Wallflower, Columbia U P, 2002), Quirky Quality TV: Northern Exposure 
(forthcoming from Manchester U P), Reading Deadwood: Realizing the Western
and 
Reading The Sopranos: Is This the End of Tony Soprano? (both forthcoming in 
the Reading Contemporary Television Series, I. B. Tauris, 2006), and Master
of 
Its Domain: Revisiting Seinfeld, TV's Greatest Show (forthcoming from 
Continuum). He is also co-editor of in-development books on Twin Peaks, My
So 
Called Life, Curb Your Enthusiasm, Lost, and Fake News

Dr. David Lavery
English Department
Middle Tennessee State University
Murfreesboro, TN 37132
615-898-5648; Fax: 615-898-5098
Homepage: http://www.mtsu.edu/~dlavery/
Editor: SLAYAGE: THE ONLINE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BUFFY STUDIES
(slayage.tv); Co-Convener, The Slayage Conference on the Whedonverse:
http://slayage.tv/SCW/

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