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[Commlist] REFRAME Round-Up Spring 2020 (published)
Tue Feb 18 15:24:40 GMT 2020
REFRAME Round-up Spring 2020
We are happy to present the latest roundup of newly published open
access scholarly items at the REFRAME digital platform, hosted by the
School of Media, Film and Music, University of Sussex.In addition to the
items below, at REFRAME you will also find freely downloadable books on
film and media studies and digital humanities; more than a dozen videoed
talks by top international scholars and media practitioners; and lots of
film and media studies research and commentary at our existing websites:
including Life Writing Projects, SEQUENCE, Reframing Psychoanalysis, For
Your Ears Only: Deep Dives in Podcasting, The Audiovisual Essay and
Global Queer Cinema. Thanks so much to all the colleagues (at Sussex and
far beyond) who contribute to REFRAME in order to bring all this
material into the public domain.
Links to all the below can may be found here:
https://reframe.sussex.ac.uk/blog/2020/02/17/reframe-round-up-spring-2020/
and please check out REFRAME’s projects page for more info on the
platform’s many publications and outputs:
https://reframe.sussex.ac.uk/reframe-projects/
Best wishes
Tanya Kant and Katherine Farrimond Co-managing editors, REFRAME
1. NEW VIDEOS at REFRAME ENCOUNTERS – a video series showcasing diverse,
current and ongoing projects from researchers in the School of Media,
Film and Music at the University of Sussex.
2. NEW CONTENT at MEDIÁTICO – research, news, views and perspectives on
Latin(o/a) American, Spanish and Portuguese media culture.
3. NEW CONTRIBUTIONS at RE.FRAMING ACTIVISM – an interdisciplinary,
multimedia blog that brings together academic research, media practice
and current news about mediated activism.
1. NEW VIDEOS at REFRAME Encounters
Visit the series here: https://reframe.sussex.ac.uk/reframe-encounters/
REFRAME is thrilled to introduce Encounters – a new video series
showcasing some fantastic new and ongoing projects from researchers in
the School of Media, Film and Music at University of Sussex. These
videos, produced in conjunction with MFM’s Impact team, feature the new
work of four members of the Media, Film and Music faculty. Dr Michael
Lawrence discusses the relationship between global humanitarianism and
media culture, and in particular the transformation of humanitarian
media in the digital era. Dr Pollyanna Ruiz introduces her AHRC funded
collaboration with the skate community on London’s Southbank and
reflects upon the interplay between expertise in the arts, heritage and
academia. Professor Alisa Lebow introduces her collaborative manifesto,
Beyond Story, on the politics of documentary filmmaking. Dr Thomas
Austin talks about his forthcoming book, Cinema of Crisis: Film and
Contemporary Europe. Visit all these videos here:
https://reframe.sussex.ac.uk/reframe-projects/reframe-projects-and-publications/
2. NEW CONTENT at MEDIÁTICO Visit the site here:
https://reframe.sussex.ac.uk/mediatico
a) LIVING UNDOCUMENTED, A NEW NETFLIX SERIES THAT GIVES A HUMAN FACE
TO IMMIGRANT STORIES Following the hearings of oral arguments and
stories from DACA recipients in the Supreme Court of the United States,
Mediático is delighted to present an excellent and timely new post by
regular contributor and newly promoted Professor, Dr Deborah Shaw about
the new Netflix series Living Undocumented.
b) THESE MEXICAN MÄDCHEN A double post by Catherine Grant and Robert
Carlos Ortiz. Catherine Grant presentsa comparative videographic study
showcasing the repetitions and variations across two sets of
corresponding sequences from the three direct film adaptations of
Christa Winsloe’s Mädchen in Uniform / Girls in Uniform (aka Ritter
Nérestan and Gestern und Heute, 1930-32): Mädchen in Uniform (Leontine
Sagan, Germany 1931); Muchachas de uniforme (Alfredo B. Crevenna, Mexico
1951); Mädchen in Uniform (Géza von Radványi, West Germany 1958).
Roberto Carlos Ortiz undertakes a production and textual analysis of
Muchachas de uniforme (Alfredo B. Crevenna) by situating the Mexican
remake of Mädchen in Uniform in the midst of Mexico’s transnational and
genre based classical film industry, and also exploring the appeal of
its Italian-Polish star Irasema Dilian and the queer pleasures offered
by the film.
c) SO, WHY HASN’T J-LO BEEN NOMINATED FOR ANY OF THE BIG FILM
INDUSTRY AWARDS? In a timely new post regular contributor Niamh
Thornton, Reader in Latin American Studies at the University of
Liverpool, explores why J-Lo hasn’t been nominated for any awards this
year despite her critically lauded supporting performance in Hustlers
(Lorene Scafaria 2019). You can read more of Dr Thornton’s Mediático
posts, as well as the above contributions, at
https://reframe.sussex.ac.uk/mediatico
d) THE TWO POPES (FERNANDO MEIRELLES 2019): DOWN ARGENTINA WAY
Mediático is delighted to present a post by regular contributor Natália
Pinazza, Lecturer in Lusophone and Latin American Culture at the
University of Exeter, on Brazilian filmmaker Fernando Meirelles’ The Two
Popes (2019).
3. NEW CONTRIBUTION at RE.FRAMING ACTIVISM Read our new posts here:
https://reframe.sussex.ac.uk/activistmedia/2019/09/alternative-media-activism-anybody-hearing-the-audience/In
this new post, documentary filmmaker and assistant professor of
journalism Dr Gino Canella explores the relationships between Emotional
Intelligence and Grassroots Epistemology. Visit RE.FRAMING ACTIVISM for
more fantastic contributions in media-based activist research. Visit the
site here: https://reframe.sussex.ac.uk/activistmedia
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