LFSSE-26 2026 - 64th LISBON World Congress on Film studies, Sexuality and Eroticism: LFSSE-26
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Website https://drhss.org/conference/475 |
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Category Film studies, Sexuality and Eroticism
Deadline: August 01, 2026 | Date: August 18, 2026-August 20, 2026
Venue/Country: Lisbon, Portugal
Updated: 2026-03-07 16:33:16 (GMT+9)
Call For Papers - CFP
Call for papers/TopicsFull Articles/ Reviews/ Shorts Papers/ Abstracts are welcomed in the following research fields:1. Theoretical Frameworks (The "How" of Analysis)These subtopics provide the academic tools used to "read" sexuality and eroticism in a film.The Cinematic GazeThe Male Gaze (Mulvey): The objectification of the female body for the pleasure of a presumed male spectator.The Female Gaze: Subjective female desire and the subversion of traditional power dynamics.The Oppositional Gaze (hooks): How race intersects with the gaze, specifically regarding Black spectatorship.The Queer Gaze: Non-heteronormative ways of looking and being looked at.Psychoanalytic Film TheoryVoyeurism & Scopophilia: The pleasure derived from looking at others as objects.Fetishism: The use of specific body parts or objects (shoes, hair, leather) to represent erotic desire.The Unconscious: How repressed desires are manifested in dream-like film sequences.Queer Theory & Trans StudiesHeteronormativity: How cinema reinforces "straightness" as the natural default.Gender Performativity (Butler): How characters "act out" gender through costume and behavior.Trans Cinema: Representation of non-binary and transgender identities beyond medical or "tragic" tropes.2. Historical & Industrial ContextsThese topics examine how laws, technology, and social movements shaped what could be shown on screen.Censorship & RegulationThe Hays Code (1930–1968): The "Production Code" that banned "lustful kissing" and "sexual perversion" (homosexuality).Pre-Code Cinema: The era of "vamps" and explicit themes before strict moral enforcement.Rating Systems: The evolution of the X, NC-17, and R ratings and their impact on a film's commercial success.Industry InnovationsThe Rise of the Intimacy Coordinator: The modern role of ensuring consent and safety during sex scenes.Porn Studies: The academic study of the adult film industry as a parallel to mainstream cinema.Body Doubles: The ethics and aesthetics of replacing actors for nude or erotic sequences.3. Genre-Specific EroticismEroticism functions differently depending on the "rules" of the film's genre.The Erotic Thriller: Power play, betrayal, and "Femme Fatales" (e.g., Basic Instinct).Body Horror: The intersection of "The Abject" and eroticism; sex as a site of mutation or fear (e.g., the films of David Cronenberg).Coming-of-Age Cinema: Themes of sexual awakening, puberty, and the discovery of identity.Art-House & Auteur Eroticism: Explicit "unsimulated" sex used as a philosophical or aesthetic statement (e.g., Catherine Breillat, Gaspar Noé).The Musical: Sexuality expressed through choreography, costume, and rhythmic "tension and release."4. Interrelated Socio-Cultural ThemesThese topics explore how sexuality in film is never "just about sex" but is tied to broader social hierarchies.IntersectionalityRace & Hypersexualization: The historical stereotyping of Black, Latino, and Asian bodies in Western cinema.Class & Eroticism: The "forbidden" romance between different social strata (the "Lady and the Stable Boy" trope).Power & ConsentThe "Me Too" Era Impact: How modern films re-evaluate historical "romantic" scenes as coercive.BDSM & Kink in Cinema: The representation of sub-cultures and the "negotiation" of pain and pleasure.Technology & The FutureTechno-Eroticism: Sexual relationships between humans and AI or robots (e.g., Her, Ex Machina).Digital Nudity: The use of CGI to create erotic images and the ethical concerns of "Deepfakes."
Keywords: Accepted papers list. Acceptance Rate. EI Compendex. Engineering Index. ISTP index. ISI index. Impact Factor.
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