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[ecrea] CFP – FilmForum International Film Studies Conference
Sun Aug 13 17:57:20 GMT 2017
/_FilmForum 2018_/
//
/XXV Udine-Gorizia International Film Studies Conference: //A History of
Cinema Without Names///
Gorizia (Italy), March 1^st -3^rd 2018
//
*/Exposing the Moving Image: the Cinematic Medium across World Fairs,
Art Museums, and Cultural Exhibitions/*
Drawing on the outcomes of the project “A History of Cinema Without
Names”, for the XXV Edition of our International Film Studies
Conference, we decided to apply those epistemological and methodological
tools stemming from our three-year-project to a specific object. In
other words, this proposal has to be considered as the “first step” of
the second part of “A History of Cinema Without Names”, which will be
steered by a more applicative effort. This new project will be named
/Exposing the Moving Image: the Cinematic Medium across World Fairs, Art
Museums, and Cultural Exhibitions/.
It aims to shed light on the meaningful interrelations between moving
images, media and arts throughout modernity and postmodernity – which
means during the “pre-cinema, cinema and post-cinema” eras, with a
specific focus on Universal Expositions.
In fact, universal expositions proved to be crucial for the
investigations on the emergence of the cinematic medium and on its
fluctuant re-configurations within the broad “media landscape” of the
modern era. Historically, World Fairs are not only places of
self-reflexion, self-representation and self-promotion, but also moments
of “identity construction” for a social community. They configure
themselves as arenas of interdisciplinary exchanges and of cultural
eclecticism (Jeffrey T. Schnapp 2012). Not by chance, French historian
Pascal Ory discussed eight multi-layered, recurrent and basic functions
for these events, which correspond to eight across-the-board “functions
of modernity” (Ory 2010): technological, commercial, architectural,
urbanistic, artistic, propagandistic, diplomatic, and the
popular/playful one.
Thus investigating the role of the moving image in this context means to
–problematize the “exhibition frameworks and forms” as strategies for
the legitimization and institutionalization of the moving image culture
(Hagener 2007);
–to put the cinematic medium and the moving image in relation to other
cultural and industrial functions: for instance, given the significant
role international “Expos” have been playing in representing “other”
cultures and displaying ethnographic findings, world fairs and universal
exhibitions could represent a major concern for retracing connections
between the moving image and the anthropological discourse (especially
as regards non-western visual cultures);
–to show how cinema has taken part (until nowadays) in the economic
cycle, configuring itself as a useful tool for commerce within the large
“expo and world’s fair context”.
Consequently, the /Exposing the Moving Image: the Cinematic Medium
across World Fairs, Art Museums, and Cultural Exhibitions/**project
discloses three major research paths for media and cultural scholars:
1)by granting a deep time perspective (Zielinski 2006), to stress the
redundancies, recurrences and variations of moving image apparatuses and
devices from the very beginning of the “Universal Exposition experience”
until nowadays. In this sense, our general frameworks will be the
archaeology of the mobile vision and the archaeology of screens,
displays and technological novelties (Huhtamo 2013);
2)to highlight how audiovisual texts (film, analog videos, digital
videos, and so on) and, more broadly, the moving image work within these
exhibition contexts in an inter-medial and inter-textual way – more
specifically “across” and/or “outside” the “movie theatre context”;
3)by maintaining a global scope, to stress the advantages of an
intertwined approach to wide media-phenomena in the wake of the so
called “entangled history”, which “implies a shift of attention towards
the interconnectedness of the world we live in”: entangled history opens
the focus on interaction, interdependence and complexity” and aims to
overcome a mere comparative approach (Hagener 2015).
This kind of epistemological framework, which stems from an historical
investigation of World Fairs and International Exhibitions, can be
applied to other modalities of “exhibiting and exposing” cinema. In
other words, the shift towards the notion of /entangled history /through
a “deep time” investigation (Zielinski) and a “screenological” approach
(Huhtamo) could be a proper tool that highlights how musealisation
processes affected – and still affect – past and contemporary
cinematographic practices, shaping exhibition modalities that are
“always already new”.
Thus, although our CFP is more focused on the use of the cinematic
medium within the World Fairs and International Exhibitions context, we
will also welcome proposals regarding the use of moving images in other
exhibition contexts: the first and more obvious references are, of
course, the transition from cinema to museum,film installations, the
exposed cinema, the “expanded” or “extended” cinema, and so on.
In other words, we aim to map the possible interrelationships between
the notion of moving image and the notion of “exhibition” in the
broadest possible sense. Not by chance, then, we will welcome proposals
regarding also small-gauge film and amateur technology exhibitions, art
exhibition contexts, professional technical objects exhibitions,
visualization modalities for “film exhibitions”, digital media
exhibitions, exhibition practices in non-art museums, and so on.
In this sense, we will try to answer the following questions: how have
films and film technologies been exposed not only in “aesthetically
relevant contexts”, but also in “culturally relevant contexts”? Did
these cultural expositions develop “working objects” (Daston, Galison
2007) that affected specific cultural and scientific fields throughout
modernity and post-modernity? Which are the consequences of certain
“dislocative” and “paracinematic” practices (Levi 2012) stemming from
cultural exhibitions of cinematic artefacts and technologies? Which
means: how do film and film technology expositions work in didactic
contexts (such as experimental media-archaeology laboratories, for
instance) or in cultural exhibitions (such as in film culture and film
heritage institutions exhibitions apparatuses, industrial archaeology
exhibitions, technology exhibitions, and so on)?
**
*We invite you to send us proposals for papers or panels. **Proposals
should not exceed one page in length. Please make sure to attach a short
CV (10 lines max). **The deadline for their submission is October, 25^th
2017.*
*A registration fee (160 euros) will be applied. Moreover travel costs
(tickets, etc.) will not be refunded.*
*On the other hand, we will partially cover the costs of your
accommodation (2 nights in the best accommodation solutions available).
S**pecial rates are available for additional nights.*
**
**
*For more information, please contact us at
**/(cinemawithoutnames /at/ gmail.com)/* <mailto:(cinemawithoutnames /at/ gmail.com)>/./
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