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[ecrea] Spiral Film and Philosophy Conference: "Love and Death"
Mon Jan 30 10:07:25 GMT 2017
*CALL FOR PAPERS**[DEADLINE EXTENDED]*
**
*Spiral Film and Philosophy Conference: **“**Love and Death**”*
**
*York University*
*Toronto, Canada*
*May 12-**13, 201**7*
/The modern fact is that we no longer believe in this world. We do not
even believe in the events which happen to us, love, death, as if they
only half concerned us. It is not we who make cinema; it is the world
which looks to us like a bad film.///
—Gilles Deleuze, /Cinema 2/
One of the few North American events specifically devoted to exploring
the intersections of film, media and philosophy, the Spiral Collective
seeks submissions for its second annual conference, organized, this
year, around the theme of “Love and Death.”
Can the much-discussed and debated “death of cinema” introduce, through
its very negation of a future of/for cinema, a renewed love for the
cinematic? Can cinema bring us into an encounter —perhaps an amorous one
—with something beyond human experience, and by extension, beyond
mortality and death? Love and death have been primary concerns in
philosophy, from its pre-classical origins to the present, finding a
multitude of complex and contradictory sets of interrelations. Indeed,
the fraught, and perhaps integral, relationship between love and death
has been a recurrent, even obsessive feature of both philosophical
reflection and cinematic representation that shows no signs of letting
up. From romantic, existential, metaphysical, and phenomenological
meditations on morality, mourning and grief to transgressive depictions
of the erotics of violence or the aesthetic formalization of sexuality
and mortality, philosophy and cinema have both passionately and coldly
considered the deep ties and bubbling surfaces between the two highly
suggestive terms.
In taking on the cognition of death — that of others and of one’s own —
and the affective and emotive intensity of love, or, alternatively, the
affective charge of morbidity and the rationality of commitment
(romantic, political, or otherwise), philosophy and cinema both find and
construct a vital zone of encounter and confrontation. To this end,
contemporary developments in cinema and media respond to transformations
in the political and cultural meanings of love and death just as
philosophy maintains its relevance, or not, in relation to how it
approaches both timely and timeless issues of life, love and death
relative to other concepts like truth, morality, world, and community.
Influential philosophical traditions persist in theoretical debates on
the concepts of love and death, some arguing for pure affirmation and
difference and others for negativity and nothingness. Cinema inscribes
mortality into its very images: it reanimates and creates in the same
gestures of disappearance and destruction. Digital cinema and media
further complicate the dynamics of love and death.
We seek papers for 20 minute presentations on, but not limited to, any
of the following topics, themes and concepts:
•existentialism, nihilism, death drive;
•romanticism, the sublime, morbidity, the gothic;
•materialism, decay, death;
•negativity and negation;
•mourning and melancholy;
•vitalism, difference, life;
•phenomenology of love and death;
•religion, theology, sacrifice and ritual;
•intimacy, sexuality, infatuation;
•pornography and eroticism;
•affect and affect theory;
•psychoanalytic approaches to love and death;
•suicide, martyrdom, end-of-life issues;
•terror, horror, shock, delirium;
•biopolitics, immunization and wounds;
•femininity and feminist approaches to love and death;
•queer theory and love and death;
•cultural reproduction, transmission and survival;
•cinephilia and the death (and/or afterlife) of cinema;
•the aesthetics of love and death;
•cinematic bodies, cinematic deaths, cinematic loves;
•media and morbidity
We welcome papers that engage with the work of specific philosophers and
theorists who think about love and death from any variety of
perspectives and further relate them to questions of cinema and media
studies. We also welcome filmmakers, media practitioners, and activists
to present and discuss their work.
The confirmed Keynote Speaker for “Love and Death”is Eugenie Brinkema,
Associate Professor of Contemporary Literature and Media at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She is the author of /The Forms
of the Affects/, published with Duke University Press in 2014. Her
articles have appeared in numerous anthologies and journals including
/Angelaki/, /Camera Obscura/, /Criticism/, /differences/, /Discourse/,
/The Journal of Speculative Philosophy/, /The Journal of Visual
Culture/, /Qui Parle/, and /World Picture/.
“Love and Death” will be held at York University, Toronto, Canada May
12-13, 2017.
Please send a 350 word abstract, brief bibliographyand bio (with
institutional affiliation, if applicable) in a single document to
(yorkfilmphilosophy /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(yorkfilmphilosophy /at/ gmail.com)>by
February 15, 2017.
*Conference Registration Fee:*
Conference Attendance: $100 (Canadian)
Graduate Students and Underemployed: $50 (Canadian)
Conference website: https://yorkfilmphilosphy.wordpress.com/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/741832365973130/
Organized by the Spiral Film and Philosophy Collective in collaboration
with the department of Cinema and Media Studies, York University.
Co-sponsored by: the Graduate Program in Philosophy at York University,
the York Graduate Film Student Association, and the Graduate Program in
Social and Political Thought at York University
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