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[Commlist] Call for Proposals – International Conference || Histories of Tacit Cinematic Knowledge
Wed Nov 20 20:41:24 GMT 2019
Call for Proposals – International Conference
Histories of Tacit Cinematic Knowledge
June 25-27, 2020
Goethe University Frankfurt (Campus Westend)
Organized by the Graduate Research Training Program 2279 “Configurations
of Film”
www.konfigurationen-des-films.de <http://www.konfigurationen-des-films.de>
Confirmed Keynote Speakers:
- Teresa Castro (Université Sorbonne Nouvelle - Paris 3)
- Jie Li (Harvard University)
- Henning Schmidgen (Bauhaus-Universität Weimar)
During a hospital stay in the US, French anthropologist Marcel Mauss
became fascinated
with the nurses’ gait, which reminded him of the peculiar way of walking
by Hollywood movie stars. Back on his feet and back in Paris, Mauss
noticed the same gait among Parisian women: “In fact, American walking
fashions had begun to arrive [in France], thanks to the movies.” However
problematically gendered it now appears, Mauss’s observation, which he
made in connection with his study Techniques of the Body (1934), alerts
us to an important mode of knowledge circulation that we define as
“tacit cinematic knowledge”: implicit, informal, and uncodified
knowledge acquired in, with, and through film and cinema that informs
cultural and social practice outside the cinematic dispositif. Drawing
on Michael Polanyi’s concept of “tacit knowledge,” the notion of “tacit
cinematic knowledge” allows us to theorize how tacit epistemic templates
that use cinematic forms and techniques configure and enable daily
activities, social interactions, warfare, education, and working procedures.
The theorization of “tacit cinematic knowledge” also has a historical
dimension. Cinematic techniques have been common in many fields of
cultural practice since the development of moving image technologies,
and configurations of film have continuously appeared in unexpected
locations and unsuspected forms, formats, usages, and temporalities
beyond the cinema. In the late 1930s, Eisenstein described architecture
in terms of a “montage sequence ... subtly composed, shot by shot” by
his legs as he walked among the buildings of the Acropolis. In the early
1940s, war reporter and novelist Vasily Grossman wrote about the
experience of battle, stating that he was “forever feeling as if I am on
the cinema screen, not just watching it.” Today, airports, data centers,
weather stations, laboratories of aerodynamics and fluid mechanics,
corporations, military bases, schools are just a few examples of sites
where cinematic knowledge routinely supports and shapes different sorts
of procedures, social and object interactions. From software for the
visual design of industrial products to games for military training,
from surveillance cameras to telepresence robots that facilitate
multinational corporate meetings, from videos that guide the bodily
movements of people learning a new recipe on the Internet to
self-tracking devices that allow for performance control, film
technologies have become ubiquitous. In other words, in order to
understand the present state of tacit cinematic knowledge, we also need
to understand how film entered into a variety of realms of practices,
which are at first sight unrelated to film in its cinematic context.
The international conference “Histories of Tacit Cinematic Knowledge”
invites scholars to further theorize and historicize “tacit cinematic
knowledge” in its different configurations. Specific questions to be
addressed include: What is the unnoticed part of cinematic knowledge in
the production of scientific evidence? How do techniques and templates
from film affect architectural design, musical composition, or sports
performance? How do modes of circulation and formats of film reshape
human and non-human interactions and what types of political action do
they inconspicuously give rise to? How does “tacit cinematic knowledge”
create inequalities through processes of colonizing, and of gendering
societies, or what is the potential of “tacit cinematic knowledge” in
opposing institutional discrimination? What impact do configurations of
film beyond the cinema have on economies of production, distribution,
and consumption? How do film-based technologies inform policies of
security and regulate the circulation of people? How do filmic
procedures generate affect and emotions in areas that apparently have
nothing to do with film?
We welcome contributions from all scientific fields, including
sociology, anthropology, architecture, literature, musicology,
educational sciences, neurosciences, engineering and technology studies,
theatre, film and media studies. We are especially interested in papers
that engage with the following topics:
Tacit Cinematic Knowledge and:
- Visual Literacy, Data Visualization, Didactics
- Architecture, Networks, Infrastructures
- Body, Embodiment, Performativity
- Sounds, Soundtracks, Film Scoring Practices
- Sensors, Screens, Secrecy, and Surveillance
- Industrial Complex, Corporate Culture, Institutional Practices
- Race, Gender, Labor, Sexuality
- Amateur Media, Participatory Culture, Media Convergence
- Globalization, Transnationalism, Nationalism
Please send 250–300 word abstracts and a brief biographical note to
(2020tacit /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(2020tacit /at/ gmail.com)> by January 15, 2020.
Applicants will be notified of acceptance by February 15, 2020.
The conference organizers have set aside funds for travel grants for
graduate students and precariously employed (part time on limited
contract) or currently unemployed scholars. Further information about
the application process for travel grants will be sent out with the
acceptance notifications. Information about the event will be available
at www.konfigurationen-des-films.de/en
<http://www.konfigurationen-des-films.de/en>.
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