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Mon Oct 14 08:49:39 GMT 2002
>
>
>Changes in visual news
>
>A series of lectures about newsreels and the transition to television news
>
>Each Tuesday from November 19 till December 17, 2002
>
> From 6 PM till 7.30 PM
>
>Film-Plateau - Gent (Belgium)
>
>Organization: Working group Film and Television Studies (Ghent University)
>
>
>
>Within the scope of current research on non-fiction, newsreels and
>television news, the Working Group Film and Television Studies organizes a
>series of lectures about newsreels and the transition to television news.
>In this series specialists will express their opinions about the subject.
>One of the foreign speakers is the Dutch film historian Bert Hogenkamp
>(University of Utrecht), who will talk about the workers film news in the
>twenties and thirties, while Stig Hjarvard (University of Copenhagen) will
>deal with the transition from newsreels to television news. John Corner
>(University of Liverpool) will shed light on the British context.
>
>These lectures will be intensively illustrated with authentic film/video
>material, including footage from the Imperial War Museum, the
>Bundesarchiv-Filmarchiv, the VRT Beeldarchief and the DR television
>archives.In relation to these lectures, the working group also organizes a
>series of master classes for university graduates as well as a series of
>films in Film-Plateau about the imagination of journalists and editorial
>staffs in the cinema
><http://www.psw.rug.ac.be/comwet/wgfilmtv/>http://www.psw.rug.ac.be/comwet/wgfilmtv/)
>
>PROGRAMME
>
>Introduction to lectures : DANIEL BILTEREYST (Ghent University, B)
>
>November 19 BERT HOGENKAMP (NIBG/University of Utrecht, NL) on workers
>film news in the twenties and the thirties
>
>November 26 ROEL VANDE WINKEL (Ghent University, B) on film news and
>propaganda in occupied Belgium
>
>December 3 STIG HJARVARD (University of Copenhagen, DK) Against the very
>nature of the medium (lecture in English)
>
>December 12 JOHN CORNER (Liverpool University, UK) Seeing Behind the
>news: the World in Action project (lecture in English)
>
>December 17 LIEVE DESMET (Ghent University, B) on the early beginnings of
>television news on the Flemish public broadcasting corporation
>
>ABSTRACTS AND ShORT CVs
>
>DANIEL BILTEREYST is a professor at the Ghent University, where he teaches
>film, television and cultural media studies and where he leads the Working
>Group Film and Television Studies. His field of research is about the
>media as a crucial forum for social debate, controversy and the spreading
>of information and knowledge. He is the promoter of several research
>projects funded by the Scientific Research Fund (Flanders, B, see further:
>current research). In his personal research he concentrates mainly on
>controversial cinema and television, using both contemporary genres (e.g.
>forms of reality television) and more historical cases. He is currently
>conducting a large scale research on controversial films and film
>censorship in Belgium (Forbidden Images: Controversy, changing society
>and film censorship in Belgium, 2003-6). This series of lectures takes
>place as part of research and working colleges about news and newsreels.
>Daniel Biltereyst introduces and moderates the lectures.
>
>BERT HOGENKAMP is a media historian at the Dutch Institute for Image and
>Sound in Hilversum, NL. Moreover, he is a professor of film history, radio
>and television at the University of Utrecht. His research specialities are
>the history of documentary films and the use of films by the workers
>movement in Western Europe.
>
>The news differently or different news: workers film news in the 20s and 30s
>
>In the 20s and 30s, the need was felt within the left wing movement to
>introduce an alternative to the commercial or middle-class film news.
>Film editing was an important means with which even images from the
>middle-class news could be given a new meaning. Besides that, the workers
>news showed events which were left aside by the commercial news.
>
>ROEL VANDE WINKEL is an historian, linked to the Working Group of Film and
>Television Studies of the Communication Sciences Department, Ghent
>University. He works as a researcher for Light on a collective history,
>) a research project promoted by Daniel Biltereyst (Ghent U) in
>collaboration with the Royal Film Archives; the project is financed by the
>Flemish Scientific Research Council (Max Wildiers Fund). His specialities
>of research are: non-fiction film in/about Flanders (1895-1950) and film
>and propaganda in the Third Reich (1933-1945).
>
>Film news and propaganda in occupied Belgium
>
>This lecture, an introduction to a Ph.D. which will be defended in 2003,
>shows how the German occupying forces obliged the projection of propaganda
>film news. At first, these newscasts were made in Berlin, including the
>French or Dutch comments. After a few months though, a local editorial
>staff was installed in Brussels which was supposed to give a Belgian look
>to the German propaganda. Next to comparing the German original to the
>Belgian clone, the attention is focused on the way in which television
>producers use this material in historical documentaries nowadays. The
>material shown originates from the Bundesarchiv-Filmarchiv collections.
>
>STIG HJARVARD is professor at the Department of Film & Media Studies,
>University of Copenhagen, Denmark. Head of department 1996-1999; head of
>research programme "Global Media Cultures 1999 - 2001"
>(www.media.ku.dk/global), head of The National Research School for Media,
>Communication, and Journalism (www.fmkj.dk). Research areas: international
>news, television history, journalism, rating analysis, toys and media.
>Recent books in English: "Audiovisual Media in Transition" (1998, coedited
>with Thomas Tufte, Sekvens) and "News in a Globalized Society" (2001,
>editor, Nordicom). He is currently editing a book on the programme history
>of Danish television.
>
>Against the very nature of the medium
>
>It was not until 1965, that Danish television began its regular news
>programming, and although it was much awaited, it was met with harsh
>criticism. This way of reporting the news, the public verdict sounded,
>"was against the very nature of the medium". Earlier on, the factual
>programming on Danish television had consisted of newsreel formats and
>different kinds
>of documentaries and current affairs programmes. In this lecture
>particular attention is paid to the analysis of the non-personal, very
>formal and highly institutional mode of address that characterized the
>early years of news broadcasting in Danish television. How - and why - it
>departed from both earlier and later audiovisual news formats is discussed
>in relation to both aesthetic conventions, technological possibilities and
>institutional constraints.
>
>JOHN CORNER is Professor in the School of Politics and Communication
>Studies, University of Liverpool and an editor of the journal, Media,
>Culture and Society. He has published widely in books and journals and
>his recent books include Studying the Media: Problems of Theory and
>Method (Edinburgh 1998) and Critical Ideas in Television Studies
>(Oxford 1999). He is currently writing on Political Communication and on
>Television History.
>
>Seeing Behind the News: the World in Action project
>
>The series World in Action ran in Britain from the early 1960s and was a
>big influence on the development of television journalism. It set itself
>the challenge of crafting a new kind of pictorial reporting, drawing on
>the methods of broadcast news, the tradition of documentary film-making
>and new currents in newspaper feature-writing. It attempted to be both
>serious and popular, holding the audience within a strong narrative and
>scopic design. This lecture looks at some of the key elements of the WIA
>recipe, drawing particularly on the ways in which it often attempted to
>place itself inside the stories it told, opening up new pictorial space
>for reportage. Screenings will be from WIA material.
>
>LIEVE DESMET has a Ph.D. mandate from the BOF (UG 2002-5) at the
>Communications Sciences Department with Daniel Biltereyst as her promotor.
>She is also joined to the Working Group Film and Television Studies. Her
>project consists of a multimethodological research on the development of
>television news as a genre by the Flemish public broadcasting corporation
>(1953-2003). The study is based upon original material and news scripts of
>the VRT Images Archives. Her specialities of research are evolutions in
>format, contents and discourse of television news.
>
>Start and development of television news on the Belgian PSB
>
>Processes of news production are aggregates of meaningful practices always
>embedded in a historical, social, political, technological and economic
>context. Television news can be considered as a culture form. The
>perspective is to see the newscast not only as a report of reality, but to
>examine it as reality unto itself. Three assumptions will be considered.
>Firstly, the long-term development of television news cant be understood
>simply as a linear and continuous trend over time. Secondly, the impact
>and influence of political, cultural, economic, social and technological
>circumstances vary in time. Thirdly, the expansion, the monopolization and
>the protection of an own authority lead to common standards of what
>television news is and should be and to typical news formats, news
>contents and news representations. This lecture will discuss and
>illustrate those three topics for the television news on the Belgian PSB.
>
>PRACTICAL INFORMATION
>
>Place: Film-Plateau Paddenhoek 3 9000 Gent - Belgium
>
>Entrance: free
>
>Information: Tel. : 09 264 91 85
>E-mail:<mailto:(yen.peeren /at/ rug.ac.be)>(yen.peeren /at/ rug.ac.be)
>
>
>http://www.psw.rug.ac.be/comwet/wgfilmtv/changes_in_visual_news%20lezingenengels.htm
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