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[ecrea] Young Filmmakers and Cultures of Digital Production - Special Issue of Nordic Journal of Digital Literacy published (open source)
Fri Feb 01 18:14:43 GMT 2013
The latest issue of Nordic Journal of Digital Literacy is a Special
Issue about Cultures of Digital Production and Moving Images among Youth
(http://www.idunn.no/ts/dk/2012/04):
INTRODUCTION (http://www.idunn.no/ts/dk/2012/04/introduction ) by
Øystein Gilje, University of Oslo & Brit Svoen, Lillehammer University
College (guest editors)
PEER-REVIEWED SESSION
Jo Sondre Moseng & Håvard Andreas Vibeto: DOUBLE ALLEGIANCE: DIGITAL
NATIVES AS FILMMAKERS
(http://www.idunn.no/ts/dk/2012/04/double_allegiance_digital_natives_as_filmmakers),
Page 236-252.
ABSTRACT: This article is based on close examination of more than 300
films screened at the Amandus film festival for young filmmakers, in the
25 year period between 1987 and 2012. The aim of the article is to
highlight some of the most striking developments in this data material -
aesthetically as well as thematically. The overall argument is that the
Amandus films display a double allegiance to commercial movies, both in
terms of their semi-professional cinematic form and in terms of the
themes and moral attitudes expressed.
Yvonne Fritze & Geir Haugsbakk: THE VOICE OF YOUTH - ON REFLEXIVITY IN
YOUNG FILMMAKERS' FILMS
(http://www.idunn.no/ts/dk/2012/04/the_voice_of_youth_-_on_reflexivity_in_young_filmmakers_fi).
Page 253-269.
ABSTRACT: The subject of this article is the films nominated for the
Amandus Festival after the turn of the century. It examines how young
people present themselves in today's society and how this relates to
distinctive trends in societal development. Our analysis builds on an
interpretation of contemporary society as hypercomplex and characterised
by choice and uncertainty, calling for a reflexive approach. This is
what we have looked for in the films. Films of this kind thematise the
way young people relate to this complexity and have a creative and
conscious relation to genres, and are thus an expression of the voice of
youth.
Alicia Blum-Ross: YOUTH FILMMAKING AND 'JUSTICE-ORIENTED CITIZENSHIP'
(http://www.idunn.no/ts/dk/2012/04/youth_filmmaking_and_justice-oriented_citizenship).
Page 270-283
ABSTRACT: Based on the ethnographic example of the Reelhood project,
this article explores the different discourses of 'citizenship' that
emerged within a youth filmmaking project for young British Muslims.
Using Westheimer and Kahne’s distinction between the competing
understandings of 'citizenship' that often inform educational
interventions, I demonstrate how project funders and organizers proposed
a different version of citizenship to that privileged by the young
participants. Considering the particular technical, creative and social
affordances of filmmaking, I examine whether these different visions
were able to be reconciled.
Brit Svoen & Øystein Gilje: POLICY MAKING AND PRACTICES OF PRODUCTION
ACROSS CONTEXTS OF LEARNING
(http://www.idunn.no/ts/dk/2012/04/policy_making_and_practices_of_production_across_contexts_o).
Page 284-300
ABSTRACT: This article explores how policymaking relates to young
people's ability to produce moving images in Norway by connecting the
three domains authorities' incentives and policy-making, youth
production practices and availability of production resources and
contexts. First, we give an overview of how policymakers have
facilitated formal and non-formal contexts for moving image production.
Second, we provide a bottom-up perspective, aiming at understanding
youth production practices over time in and out of school. By combining
a top-down, policy-oriented perspective with a bottom-up
practice-oriented perspective, we illustrate how filmmaking as a
distinct culture of digital production has been constituted and
elaborated in an era of transition from analogue to digital technologies.
PRACTICAL/NON-SCIENTIFIC SESSION
Felicia Krumholz & Beatriz Moreira de Azevedo Porto Gonçalves:
PARTICIPATION AND LEARNING TRAJECTORIES ON THE RIO INT'L FILM FESTIVAL'S
SECTION FOR CHILDREN AND YOUNG PEOPLE
(http://www.idunn.no/ts/dk/2012/04/participation_and_learning_trajectories_on_the_rio_intl_fi).
Page 302-314
ABSTRACT: This paper presents the Generation Program, a segment for
children and teenagers at the Rio de Janeiro International Film Festival
(Mostra Geração and Festival do Rio in Portuguese) in Brazil. The
authors are members of the curatorial and production team and both
belong to GRUPEM (Grupo de Pesquisa em Educação e Mídia) - the Education
and Media Research Team linked to the Board of Education of the
Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro. The considerations
produced by the research team contributed to the analysis of this
experiment. This paper prioritizes aspects related to audiovisual
production made for and by children and teenagers, but also includes
some of the recent history of practices involving cinema, audiovisual
material and education in Rio. It also considers some public policies
that interfere with the development of audiovisual education with and
for audiovisual languages.
Andrew Burn & Mark Reid: SCREENING LITERACY: REFLECTING ON MODELS OF
FILM EDUCATION IN EUROPE
(http://www.idunn.no/ts/dk/2012/04/screening_literacy_reflecting_on_models_of_film_education_).
Page 314-323
ABSTRACT: This article, building on an extensive summary of the
European-scale Experts' Study on film literacy in Europe 2012, draws
attention to two different conceptions of film education: as an (a)
entitlement for all, a social good (akin to the entitlement to universal
literacy) and as (b) an instrumental means of developing film consumers,
or audiences. Based upon a large survey of film education across 32
European countries, the authors give the context of film literacy in
Europe three perspectives: (1) The established practice of film
educators across all sectors in the member states; (2) the wider
arguments about film culture and its importance; and (3) the relation
between film literacy and media literacy, especially in the context of
the EC's media literacy initiative. We also reflect at the end on the
relation between film education and the affordances, limitations and
misconceptions surrounding digital technologies.
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