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[Commlist] Spiral Film and Philosophy 4th Annual Conference
Thu May 09 21:35:43 GMT 2019
Join us on *May 17 and 18* for *the fourth edition of /Spiral Film and
Philosophy /**annual conference*! This year edition, titled *“IT’S
ALIVE! FILM / FORM / LIFE”*
<https://spiralfilmphilosophy.ca/2019-film-form-life/> brings a mix of
emergent and established scholars from 6 different countries for a
two-day long exciting conversation. The entire event will be hosted at
the Toronto Media Arts Centre (TMAC), conveniently located downtown
Toronto (directions <https://spiralfilmphilosophy.ca/directions/>).
Registration <https://spiralfilmphilosophy.ca/> is required. Media and
communication studies scholars are especially welcome!
/This event is sponsored by York University's //*Cinema & Media Arts
Program*/ <https://cma.ampd.yorku.ca/>, /*York Graduate Film Student
Association*/ <https://yorkgradfilm.wordpress.com/>, /Glendon Campus
*Communications Program* <https://www.glendon.yorku.ca/communications/>
//and /*/T/*/*oronto Media Arts Centre (TMAC)*/
<https://www.tomediaarts.org/>
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*/It’s Alive! Film / Form / Life/*
*May 17-18, 2019*
*▶︎ **Full Program & Information
<https://spiralfilmphilosophy.ca/program-2019/> ◀︎*
*
*
Keynote Adress by <https://spiralfilmphilosophy.ca/keynote-2019/>
*Deborah Levitt*
The New School
Saturday, May 18, 2019
6:00 PM
Understanding lives as media forms and media as life forms opens a way
to address the actual state of emergency of our times: how to enable
pluralism and promote ecological regeneration in the milieu of planetary
computing. In this talk, I counterpose “the world” as it has served as a
fundamental reference point for a tendency in film theory, often
grounding claims of representational fidelity and ethical vocation, to
the multiplicity of worlds rendered in the pluriverse of animation. If
for the former life functioned as an ontological problematic—what is
life? what is death?—the latter compels us to think life in relation to
world. Or, more precisely, lives in relation to worlds. In this view,
life and world are co-emergent in each case, informed by the technical,
material, and ethical procedures that constitute their milieux. The
multiple ontologies of animated worlds enable us to imagine and
experience vitality and liveliness as different types of qualities
differently distributed across a world’s elements: figures, grounds,
scales, rhythms, etc. Drawing on these animatic features, I describe how
emerging media allow us to use world making to model various
cosmotechnical life-worlds, and pose the question of how we might put
these to work to render diverse and convivial futures.
*Deborah Levitt is Assistant Professor of Culture & Media Studies at The
New School, in New York City. She is the author of The Animatic
Apparatus: Animation, Vitality, and the Futures of the Image (Zero
Books, 2018), and co-editor of Acting and Performance in Moving Image
Culture: Bodies, Screens, and Renderings (Transcript Verlag, 2012). She
has published articles and interviews in Public Seminar, Waking Life:
Kino zwischen Technik und Leben, Inflexions: A Journal of
Research-Creation, The Scholar and Feminist Online, The Year’s Work in
Critical and Cultural Theory, and The Agamben Dictionary, among others.*
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