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[ecrea] CFP: The Politics of Faith, Spirituality, and Religion in Southeast Asian Cinemas
Fri Jul 28 04:51:37 GMT 2017
CFP: The Politics of Faith, Spirituality, and Religion in Southeast
Asian Cinemas
10th Biennial Association for Southeast Asian Cinemas Conference (ASEACC)
July 23-26, 2018, Indonesian Institute of the Arts, Yogyakarta, Indonesia.
In Southeast Asia, the tropes of faith/belief, spirituality and religion
are frequently inseparable from the political––whether specific regimes,
groups, movements or longer 'undercurrents'––in a way that challenges
post-enlightenment, rationalist/secularist conceptions of the political
and the modern. As the products of these rapidly changing societies with
diverse and long-historical philosophies and practices of faith,
religion and ritual, Southeast Asian cinemas have often occupied
disputed theoretical and aesthetic ground, particularly in their
engagements with politics. Local cinematic forms have consistently
resisted any absolute break with the power structures and attendant
narrative and aesthetic discourses that link the regional past to its
national presents. The resultant connection drawn by many local films
between modernism and approaches to life, politics and representation
that implicitly or explicitly eschew Western secularism have frequently
served as a source of consternation or dismissal from both local and
global audiences and critics.
In the decades since 9/11, however, as religion has become ever more
visible and the post-European Enlightenment ideal of separation between
public and private spheres has been increasingly destabilized throughout
the world, films engaging with the profound continuity of local
aesthetic and spiritual pasts in Thailand, Indonesia, the Philippines
and elsewhere have also begun to gain more regular acceptance in the
foremost bastions of cinematic legitimacy in Europe, East Asia and the
United States. How might works like these––and perhaps more important,
those less universally appreciated offerings that preceded
them––challenge and expand our understanding of what cinema is and does?
How might the analysis of Southeast Asian cinemas, genres, or particular
films inspire a critical rethinking of the position and role of
religion, faith and other “old” systems of belief in processes of
regional transformation and decolonization, and the production and
spread of modernity and nationalism they fostered?
Perhaps the most pressing question in this context: in light of the
alarming contemporary expansion of politico-religious conservatism and
authoritarianism throughout the region, might Southeast Asian films,
filmmakers and theorists be especially well positioned to formulate a
critical response that elides the polarizing valorization of secularism
so often deployed by Western critics?
Possible topics include, but are by no means limited to:
● Representation of religion, religious themes, and spirituality in cinema
● Faiths, identity-based politics, sectarianism
● Cinema as a vehicle for the adaptation and continual development of
religious or traditional ideologies and systems of thought
● Cinema as a mediator between religious and political authorities and
the public
● Cinematic reference to, or quotation of, traditional systems of belief
and forms of expression
● Cinema and Institutional investment in defining and promoting tradition
● Faith/religion and reception, exhibition, distribution (ex. themed
festivals)
● Films as interventions into religious politics/cultures and sectarian
politics
● Faith/religion/spirituality, film, and consumer culture
● Religion and censorship
● Islamic themed films as a contemporary phenomena in Indonesia and
Malaysia (and elsewhere)
ASEACC welcomes presentations related to the conference theme or to
Southeast Asian cinemas more broadly. Past conferences have included
site visits, screenings, and presentations from academics, critics,
filmmakers, archivists, and others interested in Southeast Asian screen
media.
Please check our website archives and conference programs for past paper
topics as we are less likely to accept topics that have been covered
before: http://seaconference.wordpress.com/
Abstract Submission Deadline: October 31, 2017. Please send an abstract
(max. 300 words) and short bio (max. 100 words) to: Katinka Van Heeren
((cvanheeren /at/ hotmail.com) <mailto:(cvanheeren /at/ hotmail.com)>), Patrick Campos
((patrick.campos /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(patrick.campos /at/ gmail.com)>), and Sophia
Harvey ((soharvey /at/ vassar.edu) <mailto:(soharvey /at/ vassar.edu)>).
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