Academic Archers 2020 conference proceedings announced!

Exciting times at Academic Archers as we can announce the speakers and papers for our fifth conference, taking place 28 February to 1 March next year, at The Museum of English Rural Life and University of Reading.

We are turning our lens to the family dynamics of Ambridge, as well as imaging it as both Springfield and an Egyptian village. This year too, with now five years of Academic Archers under our belts, we are turning the lens on ourselves, asking what Archers fandom is all about (aside from shouting at the radio as our dear Ambridgians go about their daily lives.)

All the info can be found below, and with box office open and tickets selling fast, we advise people to get in quick - and links to all the ticket types can be found below.  

 

Academic Archers 2020, conference proceedings

Friday, 28 February to Sunday, 1 March 2020

 

The Academic Archers MERL Take Over, Friday 6 pm to 8.30 pm

Welcome Reception, The Museum of English Rural Life.

Join us for the opening reception of the 2020 and fifth Academic Archers conference as we take over the Museum of English Rural Life for the evening! We have planned a pop-up exhibition of all things The Archers in its collection, a tour of its galleries, and a buffet dinner (and a special guest TBC!)

 

Tickets: https://www.tickettailor.com/events/academicarchers/290982/

 

Academic Archers 2020, Saturday 9 am - 5.30 pm (Sunday, 9.30-12 – see below)

Conference, The Great Hall, University of Reading.

Weekend tickets: https://www.tickettailor.com/events/academicarchers/293547/

Limited-number Saturday Day Tripper tickets: https://www.tickettailor.com/events/academicarchers/293554/

Academic Archers Formal(ish) Dinner tickets: https://www.tickettailor.com/events/academicarchers/293559/

 

8.30                                 Doors and registration

9 – 9.15                          Welcome from Dr Cara Courage and Dr Nicola Headlam, and Academic Archers Assembly 1                          

Session One: Family - Power and Influence

9.15 - 9.45        Keynote: The 2020 network. One in, One Out, Dr Nicola Headlam               

9.45 - 10           Parents, siblings, and the pursuit of power: Predicting the future leaders of Ambridge, Timothy Vercellotti, Professor of Political Science, Western New England University                       

10 - 10.15         ‘From the moment those two joined the committee it’s been grunge bands, sumo wrestlers and souffle competitions’ - What Ambridge’s civil society says about UK politics in 2019, Amy Sanders, PhD student, Cardiff University

Questions/discussion

10.30 - 10.45   Visionary or Vanity Project – Will the Ambridge Conservation Trust deliver a sustainable future?, Shirley Cramer, CBE CEO Royal Society of Public Health and Food, Farming and Countryside Commissioner, and Jo Bibby, Director of Health at the Health Foundation

10.45 - 11         “If you have security, Ed, that is everything”. Deconstructing ‘security’ as a buffer against life’s challenges, Lalage Cambell, retired Principal Lecturer, Reader and Head of Department of Applied Psychology at Cardiff Metropolitan University

11 - 11.15         The law of the land, land law and family dynamics in The Archers,       Elizabeth Campion, Master of Laws at the University of Cambridge  

 

11.15 - 11.25 Tea Break

 

11.25 - 11.30   Archers Assembly 2                 

 

Session Two Family dynamics - wellbeing and mental health      

Talking Cures

11.30 - 11.45   “They Needed Counselling”, Karen Pollock, psychotherapist specialising in Gender, Sexuality and Relationship diversity           

11.45 - 12         The healing powers of everyday country folk: The Archers? Better than therapy!, Dr Fiona Starr, Clinical Psychologist and an Associate Professor of Clinical Psychology at Middlesex University in London            

Ageing in Ambridge

12 - 12.05         Joe’s Funeral, Abi Pattenden, Funeral Director

12.10 - 12.25   Psychological Wellbeing in Retirement: What The Archers tell us,        Bronwen Williams, mental health nurse

12.25 - 12.40   Can’t Afford the Laurels? - Care Provision in Ambridge in 2041,                    Ruth Heilbronn and Rosalind Janssen, UCL Institute of Education

12.40 - 12.55   Why are the residents of Ambridge so financially gullible and what can we do about it??, Prof Joanna Gray, Birmingham Law School

12.55 - 2         Lunch

 

2 - 2.10             Archers Assembly 3                 

 

Session Three: the fandom panel

2.10 - 2.25        Fans, Flouncers, Fundamentalists: Customs and belief systems of The Archers online fanbase, Claire Astbury

2.25 - 2.40        Cult and Culture: Transformative Fandom de dum de dum de dum,           Helen Burrows, retired senior lecturer and practitioner in Social Work          

2.40 - 2.55        Gauging Guerrilla Academia – Exploring the impact of the ‘Academic Archers’ conference, Prof Carenza Lewis, University of Lincoln                 

2.55 - 3.10        When the Script Hits the Fan: When Archers fans stop listening – and why they can’t completely keep away, Dr Sarah Kate Merry, Coventry University

3.10 - 3.25        “I hate The Archers because…” - a conference intervention, Dr Jerome Turner

Panel responses and questions          

 

3.40 - 4           Tea break

 

4 - 4.10             Archers Assembly 4   

 

Session Four: Intertextual Lucky Dip

4.10 – 4.25       Rude mechanicals– Professional representations of the ‘amateur’ in The Archers Pantomime, Hamish Fffyfe

4.25 - 4.35        Baddies in wheelchairs and the Disneyfication of Disability, Dr Pauline Eyre

4.35 - 4.45        An overview of management styles in the Archers with a discussion of Douglas McGregor’s management Theory X and Theory Y to the Ambridge workforces, Lucinda Bufton

4.45 - 5              DumTeeDum singalong recording, Academic Archers 2020 Conference Award Ceremony

5 - 5.10             Conference proceedings close for the day

Walk/drive/taxi to dinner venue

6.30                   Meet for pre-dinner drinks, Park House, Whiteknights Campus, University of Reading, Reading, RG6 6UA

7 – 11                Academic Archers Formal(ish) Dinner, The Meadow Suite, Park House

 

ACADEMIC ARCHERS 2020, Sunday, 9.30 am -12 pm

Conference, The Great Hall, University of Reading.

 

9.00                   Doors and tea and coffee

 

Session 5: Sunday Best

9.15- 9.25         Bringing Ambridge to an Ancient Egyptian Village, Rosalind Janssen, UCL Institute of Education

9.25 – 9.35       Ambridge vs. Springfield, Gary Gilday

9.35 -9.50         A divided village: a narrative study using a theoretical lens of speculative ontology, M Bartlett

10.00 - 11.15   Live Listen, Sunday The Archers Omnibus – and world record attempt at the Tweetalong (tea and coffee available – wandering about encouraged) 

11.15                 Conference closes

 

We never thought we'd have to spell this out...

…but we LOVE The Archers, despite what a certain national Sunday newspaper said today.

Academic Archers exists to provide a place for us to share our mutual love of The Archers. The new book, whilst gathering together papers which explore feminist perspectives, is in no way hostile to the show. It is a long love letter to The Archers, as is everything we do.

Our values of generosity, curiosity and joyfulness inform our books and conferences and we are heartbroken that anyone could see us in opposition to the show.

2019 conference schedule announced!

We are delighted to announce the schedule for the fourth Academic Archers conference! 

Topics cover cradle to grave themes and everything in between. Former pregnancy services worker Carolynne Henshaw talks birth rates and attitudes to pregnancy in Ambridge, and writer and journalist, Rob Stepney answers a common listener question of why are so many of The Archers still around to annoy us, with his paper ‘A series of unfortunate events? Mortality and medical incident in a small Borsetshire village.’

We’ll be looking at childhood, particularly that of Henry Archer, in ‘‘We Should have called him Damien.’ A discussion of the impact of Henry Archer’s early years on potential crimes of the future’, by Nicola Maxfield, Curriculum Manager for Health, Public Services and Education, Alton College, and the quandaries of middle age, through the prism of Shula and Reader in philosophy, St. Mary’s University, Hannah Marije Altorf’s paper, ‘This isn’t about curry, Alistair’: Shula Hebden-Lloyd and Iris Murdoch on Love.’

Brian will be pleased to know that farming business gets its own strand this year. But maybe not so pleased with two of the papers, ‘What to do when you’re no longer Borsetshire’s Business Person of the Year or How to handle a scandal’, from Olivia Vandyk, Communications Strategist, and ‘Borsetshire Businessman or Feckless Farmer?’ from Armchair Soil Scientist, Christine Narramore.

This year also sees strands on Ambridge and rural identities and the demographic composition of Ambridge, and three papers will be queering the village and its residents. Hit of the 2018 conference, NATO advisor James Armstrong is back, with a podcast satire on counterinsurgency in Borsetshire.

The full schedule can be found on the 2019 conference page, and box office is open

2019 conference box office now open!

Ta-da! The box office for the fourth Academic Archers is live!

You’re the first to know of course – you’re welcome to share this post as you wish, but we won’t be posting this news to other Archers sites or groups for another month so you have the chance to get in first!

The 2019 conference is taking place over the weekend of 6th and 7th April, at The Edge, University of Sheffield’s conference venue.

We start with the offer of a dinner for those of you travelling up on the Friday – 90 tickets for this available. The conference itself will be over the Saturday and Sunday, with an optional conference dinner on the Saturday night – a total of 300 tickets available for the conference and also for the dinner.

As ever, we have the cost of this at the forefront of our minds. Half the allocation of all the tickets are offered at an Early Bird rate (until 31st October or until all sell out, whichever comes first) and we have kept both the Early Bird and Standard ticket rates as low as possible. There is also a limited run Saturday-only ticket option.

All the tickets (the dinners, the conference options, Early Bird and Standard) are found on the one box office page but can be bought at different times so you can purchase to suit your budget and cash flow. Please note, the Friday night dinner has a 90 capacity, so you may want to book for that sooner rather than later if you are staying on the Friday night and please note that if you pay for one ticket at the Early Bird rate, you may end up paying the Standard rate for subsequent tickets.

Sheffield University has three on-site options for accommodation (though it may not be able to accommodate all of us) and we will send on details of that to those with a conference ticket from September. There are also lots of hotel, B+B and AirBnB options locally.

https://www.eventbrite.com/e/academic-archers-2019-in-sheffield-tickets-46680949978