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[Commlist] MAGIS Spring School – International Film and Media Studies Spring School
Thu Jan 02 11:29:11 GMT 2020
XVIII MAGIS International Film and Media Studies Spring School
_Gorizia (Italy), March 28^th -31^st 2020___
Extended deadline! New deadline: January 18^th , 2020!
Confirmed Keynote Speakers:
Joanna Zylinska (Goldsmiths, University of London)
Barbara Klinger (Indiana University)
Robert Fischer
Living in the Material World: Transdisciplinary Approaches to Past and
Present Media Ecologies
Since the late Sixties, the notion of “media ecology” has become a
crucial part of the academic debate. Fostered by Neil Postman’s
theories, media ecology has configured itself as a meta-theoretical
ground on which the media are considered as technological environments,
capable of shaping our senses and perception. Throughout the years,
several insights on such topic have been developed, involving the
interrelationships between technological networks, information, and
communication (Altheide 1995; Nardi and O’Day 1999; Tacchi, Slater &
Earn, 2003; Hearn & Foth, 2007); the notion of “media practice” within
these networks (Mattoni 2017); the role of culture in their evolution
(Gencarelli 2006; Strate 2008; Polski 2013); etc. We could say that new
branches stemmed out from the methodological framework proposed by
Postman, in which McLuhan’s legacy appears to be fundamental. Some of
them stress the role of materiality in the construction of Medienverbund
(Kittler, 1986), media environments and media cultures, others focus on
the creation of power/knowledge networks (Parikka 2007, 2010, 2011,
2014): in all of them, every medium is considered as a complex system
among other complex systems, with which it develops cultural and
practical grids.
The entanglement between the concept of media ecology and the notion of
network has become massively relevant for the European debate ever since
Félix Guattari’s published his Les Trois Écologies (1989), “Postmodern
Deadlock and Post-Media Transition” (1986), and “Entering the Post-Media
Era” (2009): here, the media “ecologies” (plural!) are the material
contexts in which the processes of subjectivity construction take place.
This notion has been further elaborated by media theorists such as
Matthew Fuller (2005) and Michael Goddard (2018), who stress the role of
media assemblages, dispositives, and networks concerning the dynamics of
subjectivity construction.
In our CFP we aim to explore the multi-faceted realm of past and present
media ecologies in order to develop a transdisciplinary approach to
their epistemological ground, which will be fostered by the five
sections of our school (Cinema and Contemporary Arts, The Film and Media
Heritage, Media Archaeology, Porn Studies, and Post-Cinema).
Cinema and Contemporary Arts – On the Edge of a New Dark Age-Media
Ecology and Art Strategies
In the modernist framework of technological enthusiasm and faith in
progress, technology had been seen as one of crucial forces for society
to evolve as it never had before. More recently, this utopian view has
been flipped in its dystopian twin: since the 1990s, technological
determinism has been the flipside of the coin of several conceptions of
media ecologies and environments (particularly in reference to Marshall
McLuhan’s and Neil Postman’s understanding of the term), moving the
attention from the advantages to the consequences of technological
progress in modernized societies. In this view, the so-called Age of
Information could be seen as a paradoxical counterpart of the Age of
Enlightenment as made visible by the Internet. Whereas, for a long time,
it has been argued that putting more information in people’s hands would
have inherently fostered their understanding of public issues and
increased their participation in social life, the current
technologically advanced societies have largely proved their
incapability to provide a large and spread condition of equality, social
justice and common good (Marx, Smith 1994).
In this view, the state of confusion which we live in, the increasing
lack of political awareness, the concerns for the climate crisis, and
the commercial exploitation of public spaces via the use of digital
media, can be seen as some of the constitutive aspects underlying the
current “technologically driven authoritarianism”. As recently suggested
by James Bridle’s New Dark Age, acknowledging that the more we rely on
the media-networked environment, the less we know its deep social and
political implications calls for a critically aware response: developing
a “systemic literacy” is the first step to go beyond the purely
functional understanding of technology and “to understand the many ways
in which technology itself hides its own agency – through opaque
machines and inscrutable codes as well as physical distance and legal
constructs” (Bridle 2018: 8). >From a different standpoint, many
theoretical orientations in humanities, visual culture studies and
social sciences have investigated affectivity, focusing on the body and
collective experience as oppositional tools to the technology-driven
neoliberal modes of performativity. In the wake of the interest of
feminist and queer theories for body and emotions, they focused on the
“formative power” of affect “cast forward by its open-ended
in-between-ness (...) integral to a body’s perpetual becoming”
(Gregg-Seigworth, 2010).
All of these considerations lead us to put into question how, in the
current Information Society, knowledge flow through media and bodies and
beyond representation. Instead of being taken for granted, while
thinking at automated information as more reliable than our own
experience (“automation bias”) and progressively losing our ability to
imagine a future, digital networks and platforms must be re-assessed and
re-appropriated as tools to “rethink the world”. In this vein, the
Cinema and Contemporary Arts section’s call for papers for the XVIII
MAGIS Spring School aims at fostering the debate by gathering
theoretical and practice-based reflections on how and by which
“yardsticks” can we pinpoint new artistic strategies and tactics to
reshape our approach to technology and actively redefine our position in
the current media environment.
The Cinema and Contemporary Arts section will thus welcome proposals
related (but not limited to) the following sub-topics:
–Artists, artworks and art movements concerned with the concept of
media-ecology;
–The “new materialist energies” at work within contemporary arts (t.i.
how art has critically addressed digital materialism);
–The political ecology of knowledge practices based on body and
affectivity (Massoumi, 2002 : 255);
–Feminist and queer strategies at work against the technologies of
governmentality; the queer utopian impulse (Muñoz, 2009);
–The strategic and tactical potential of art in de-commodifying time and
the moving image;
–The production of urban and domestic space by digital media and how it
affects the public sphere;
–Digital colonialism and post-colonialism.
The Film and Media Heritage – Historicizing Platforms: Sources and Streams
Against the background of the increasing success of streaming as an
everyday mode of film experience and the new platform economy (Dal Yong
Jin, 2015; Marc Steinberg, 2019), the workshop discusses the history of
dealing with film sources and materials in the last decades – from 16
and 35 mm copies to VHS, laser disc and DVD/Blu-ray to streaming
platforms. The focus is on changes of the supposedly stable entity of
"the film" under the influence of shifting technologies and practices.
This includes the materiality and appropriation of cinematic sources as
well as the revision and making available of these.
These changes are not only worth considering with regard to coming into
contact with films (going to the cinema and travelling to retrospectives
compared to inserting a disc and going/staying online), but also to
writing about/during films (vague memories from notes written in the
dark compared to an analysis frame by frame and to the current
applications and algorithms for indexing, annotations, etc.) and for a
resulting canon formation. The development from film stock and copies to
streaming platforms leads from the establishment of film as a moving
image in public spaces and the artefacts of home cinema to – again –
moving images (and sounds), which as computer-based streams are no
longer bound to fixed screening locations. Hence, the changing mode of
“film viewing outside of theatrical precincts” (Barbara Klinger, 2006)
changes both: the mode of film experience and the source that makes this
experience possible.
Media Archaeology – Ecologies of Perception
Drawing on a media-ecological perspective, the focus of the 2020 edition
of the Media Archaeology section will be on “ecologies of perception.”
What Luciana Parisi ten years ago described as “technoecologies of
sensation,” (2009) today has developed into a new form of rationality,
one which is not only concerned with current environmentalist
challenges, but that also opens up possibilities for reconsidering
processes of “technocapitalist naturalization” (Massumi 2017). Ecology,
from this point of view, signifies the need to rethink “the capacities
of an environment, defined in terms of a multiplicity of interlayered
milieus and localities, to become generative of emergent forms and
patterns” (Parisi 2017). Today’s “general ecology,” Erich Hörl writes,
“characterises being and thought under the technological condition of a
cybernetic state of nature” (2017). Our section picks up on the
suggestion that this expanding paradigm calls for new descriptions,
including a rigorous historization of sense-perception and sensation, as
well as a reflection on their ethical and aesthetical implications. In a
time when media increasingly operate at a micro-temporal scale “without
any necessary – let alone any direct – connection to human sense
perception and conscious awareness” (Hansen 2015), it opens up a horizon
for asking “how to re-think or even reinvent media as a form of earth
re-writing” (Starosielski/Walker 2016).
Our aim is to bring together papers on the following three,
interrelated, topics:
First, the relation between media and communication technologies and
social movements. “The media ecological framework is particularly suited
for the study of the social movements/media nexus,” Treré-Mattoni (2015)
has observed, “because of its ability to provide fine-tuned explorations
of the multiplicity, the interconnections, the dynamic evolution of old
and new media forms for social change.” From within this framework, we
are keen to hear on investigations of various forms, or dispositifs, of
subjectivation in the face of newly emerging social forces or social
resistance.
Second, the role of media infrastructures in shaping our ways of
perceiving the world. Today, we are increasingly thinking and living
under conditions of an effective “programmability of planet earth.”
(Gabrys 2016). We thus need to pay attention to the complex consequences
of media becoming environmental and environments becoming mediated. From
this point of view, action and resistance, as well as dynamic relations
between human and non-human entities, need to be framed and shaped on a
wider range of scale. Joanna Zylinska, in this context, for example,
reclaims a “minimal ethics” for the Anthropocene: “swap the telescope
for the microscope,” she writes. “It is a practical and conceptual
device that allows us to climb up and down various spatiotemporal
dimensions” (2014). We ask: what would a minimal ethics for an ecology
of perception entail?
Third, the complex linkages between media as technology and
environmental issues in more-than-human worlds, including “the concrete
connections that media as technology has to resources […] and nature”
(Parikka 2013; 2016). Special focus will be dedicated to the capitalist
“production of the obsolete” (Jucan 2016); “finite media” (Cubitt 2017);
the effects or remains of what Parikka called the “anthrobscene”; and
the question what a speculative ethics of “slow (media) violence”
(Parikka) and “matters of care” (Puig de la Bellacasa 2017) might entail.
The Media Archaeology section welcomes proposals relating (but not
limited) to the following sub-topics:
–Ecologies of perception;
–Media archaeological approaches to the concept of media ecology, its
materiality and infrastructures;
–The role of media affordances in building a media ecology;
–The role of computational design;
–Critical considerations of (un)sustainable media;
–Obsolescence, and/or the reconstruction of the materiality of past
media ecologies;
–The complex relations between media technologies, natural environments,
and the multifaceted temporalities they entail;
–The role of dynamic instrumentalisation of nature in biotechnology,
nanotechnology, information technology etc.;
–The nexus between media ecologies and social movements: interactions in
a liquid production and fruition context;
–Tele-technologies for contemporary social movements (e.g. memes,
meme-platforms, meme-generator, flashmobs, Anonymous operations etc.);
–Dispositifs of subjectivation;
–Speculative ethics, and matters of care;
–The “minimal ethics” for “more-than-human worlds”;
–The notion of “slow media violence” and “matters of care”;
–Geologic matter and bio-matter, deep times and deep places of media in
mines and rare earth minerals.
Postcinema – Vulnerable Media
The Postcinema Section invites contributions on the topic of Vulnerable
Media. This conceptual framework wants to explore how current and
emergent media technologies, distribution platforms, formats or
artefacts negotiate affects between users and digital interactive
interfaces, in particular, how such media hide or show, contain or
generate forms of vulnerability.
An expanding infrastructure serves to manage our emotional experience by
tracking, quantifying and supervising, or by shaping that experience
through its interfaces, as we connect and share in affective spaces of
social media. These media which maintain and nurture our “mediated
intimacies” (Attwood, Hakim, Winch 2017) are at the same time vulnerable
to engendering processes of physical and emotional disconnect. Arguably,
these media formats and objects shape contemporary “structures of
feeling” (Williams 1961) and relational emotions (Ahmed 2004) and help
regulate affect in capitalist societies (Illouz 2007).
Such affective technologies extend beyond individual self-improvement,
leading to intimacy as a governing concept in the relation between state
and citizens. Vulnerable media here point to security gaps, hacks, and
technologies that enable surveillance and manipulation through
governments and companies such as Cambridge Analytica on a global scale,
as well as socio-cultural issues, such as exploitation in e-sports or
gamergate, comicgate etc.
From global tracking and surveillance, data collection scandals to
powerful and proprietary algorithms, quasi-monopolist blackboxed
platforms, progress on AI and machine learning systems, as well as data
collection lead to subjective feelings of vulnerability. These
developments have also renewed discourses on what it means to be human:
where does the ‘meatsuit’ end can consciousness be programmed?
In the realm of emergent media the future is tied to issues of
instability, change and obsolescence. The race for novelty and
technological innovation always entails an unending trajectory towards
obsolescence. The speed of change in these practices reflects their
inner fear of being “left behind”, paradoxically condemning emerging
technologies to a permanent state of ephemerality. Such vulnerability is
embodied, for example, by the so-called “impossible archives” (Fanfic
archives & the Wayback Machine) which challenge normative understandings
of memory and historicity, presenting us with issues of unstable
preservation in light of “update or die” logic, “glitches”, “bugs” and
“dying” media formats.
The Post-cinema section welcomes proposals on the following topics:
–Who is being made vulnerable:vloggers or creators (Lange 2007); YouTube
or TikTok stars, users/viewers (Bridle 2017);
–Where and how is vulnerability manifested or hidden: in industrial
features and vulnerable affordances; TikTok and surveillance (Allana
2019); vulnerable aesthetics; video games as “structures of feeling”
(Anable 2018);
–The vulnerability of ‘failing’: YouTube-videos with zero views; video
games as “the art of failure” (Juul 2013); old and forgotten media;
creators managing channels with just a handful of views;
–The politics and ethics of “vulnerability:” cultural discourses and
philosophical questions emerging from affect in new/digital: social
networking service (SNS) between macrosocial control and microphysical
rewriting of the self (Stella 2009); social media affect and democracy;
covert media recordings, privacy and consent;
–The affect of vulnerable media: vulnerable ways of seeing,
representation and self-representation; the digitization of bodies (see
Brodesco and Giordano 2018); cybertypes and inequalities in the digital
realm; digital divides; gamergate, comicgate;
–The vulnerability of digital technologies and ecology: media dependence
on natural resources; vulnerable humanity and vulnerable earth (Cubitt
2017; Zylinska & Kember 2012); waste and preservation management of data;
–Thevulnerable materiality of digital media:data storage and data
centers; data infrastructure and exchange;digital carbon footprint energy.
Porn Studies – Pornographic subjectivities: Sexuality, Race, Class, Age,
Dis/Ability
The 2020 edition of the Porn Studies section of the MAGIS –
International Film Studies Spring School aims to investigate pornography
as a dispositive of subjectivation (Foucault 2001), that is as a complex
and heterogeneous assemblage of technologies, institutions, discourses,
practices, ideologies (Agamben 2009) able to create subjectivity through
«a mixed economy of power and knowledge» (Rabinow and Rose 2003). The
main goal of the section is therefore to understand what kind of
subjects are produced by pornography and how they are constructed, with
particular attention to the intersections between sexuality and race,
class, age, dis/ability.
Drawing loosely on Jacques Derrida’s philosophical reflections, we could
say that pornography-as-dispositive is informed by a
carno-phallogocentric logic, that is by «the scheme that governs the
production of the subject in Western culture» (1992). According to
Derrida, this subject is produced by means of a process of exclusion (of
other subjects) and through the construction of a structural Otherness.
Pornography has always established complex and contradictory relations
with this scheme. On the one hand, pornography (or, a specific kind of
pornography) seems to reiterate (and reinforce) the logic of
carno-phallogocentrism, in that it seems to create the quintessential
«sovereign subject»: white, male, heterosexual, able-bodied, young, and
(upper) middle-class. On the other, pornography (or, another kind of
pornography) seems to undermine the carno-phallogocentric scheme from
the inside, deconstructing some of the central nodes on which it is
based, building instead heterotopic spaces in which subjects seem to
develop new and decentralized subject positions.
With this in mind, we invite proposals that explore, but are not
restricted to, the following topics:
–Pornographic representations of race, class, age, dis/ability, present
and past;
–Pornographic stereotypes about race, class, age, dis/ability and their
«changing historical contexts» (Rosello 1998);
–«Marked bodies» (Holmes 2012) in pornography;
–Re-appropriation of representation by decentralized subjects;
–«Oppositional modes of production and perverse viewerships» beyond «the
framework of visibility politics organized about the nexus of
positive-negative images» (Nguyen 2014);
–Essentialist vs. constructivist readings of race, class, age,
dis/ability and naturalization vs. denaturalization of difference in
pornography;
–Fetishization of race, class, age, dis/ability in pornographic production;
–Industrial niches (such as, for instance, interracial, “chav porn”,
granny porn, disability porn, etc.) and commodification of race, class,
age, dis/ability within long-tail economy (Anderson 2004);
–Stars and performers, present and past (for example, Jeannie Pepper,
Lexington Steele, Nina Hartley, Long Jeanne Silver, Brandon Lee, Asa
Akira, etc.)
–Specialized films, film series, websites, platforms channels and
categories on porn aggregators based on race, class, age, dis/ability.
We invite you to send us proposals for papers or panels. The deadline
for their submission is January 18^th , 2020.
Every proposal _must be_ addressed to a specific section of the Spring
School.
Proposals should not exceed one page in length. Please make sure to
attach a short CV (10 linesmax). A registration fee (€ 150) will be
applied. For more information, please contact us at
(goriziafilmforum /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(goriziafilmforum /at/ gmail.com)>.
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