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[Commlist] Centre for Film, Media, Discourse and Culture online Autumn Talks/Events
Mon Nov 16 18:21:02 GMT 2020
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The Centre for Film, Media, Discourse and Culture at the University of
Wolverhampton warmly invites you to its online Autumn Talks/Events. All
welcome
→ “Through the Cracks in the Mask: Gender, Race and Queerness in Star Wars”
Wednesday 18th November 2020, 16:00.
Speaker: Dr Rebecca Harrison, Lecturer in Theatre, Film and Television
Studies, University of Glasgow.
Finn’s iconic appearance as a Black protagonist in The Force Awakens.
Rey’s heroic dash to save her friends in The Last Jedi. The insinuation
of a lesbian relationship in The Rise of Skywalker.
Over the past five years, the Disney-helmed Star Wars franchise has
masked itself in promises of progressive representation and swished the
cloak of inclusion around its heels. But it has, for the most part,
failed to deliver. Or has it? Drawing on screen time and other data, and
analysing the films via feminism, critical race studies and queer
theory, this talk explores identity in the saga from 1977 to 2019. In
doing so, it aims to complicate narratives about representation in the
mainstream press, and to generate discussion about the franchise when
stripped of its bait-and-switch disguise.
Book via:
https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/through-the-cracks-in-the-mask-tickets-120368085183
→ In Conversation with the Centre for Film, Media, Discourse and
Culture: “How do I go about preparing my work for publication?”
Friday 20th November 2020, 16:00. With Dr Fran Pheasant-Kelly and Dr
Benjamin Halligan
How do I go about prepping my work for publication? Articles and/or
books? When should I begin this? How do I do a proposal for a publisher?
What kind of timeline can I expect? How do I convert a PhD into a book?
And more! 1 hour session (including Q&A). Contact (b.halligan /at/ wlv.ac.uk)
for invite.
→ The “Wind of Change” Blows Home: The Servant, Genre Hybridity, and
Sixties Social Upheaval
Wednesday 2nd December 2020, 17:00. Speaker: Dr Christopher Weedman,
Assistant Professor of Film Studies, Department of English, Middle
Tennessee State University
The Servant is considered a landmark of 1960s British cinema. Not only
did this 1963 film hail Joseph Losey and Harold Pinter as one of British
cinema’s foremost director-screenwriter teams, but it also firmly
cemented former matinee idol Dirk Bogarde’s post-Victim (1961)
reputation as an actor specializing in complex roles of psychological
and sexual ambiguity. The film’s enigmatic tale of a master-servant
power struggle is routinely examined through the prism of the new
British art cinema of the 1960s due to the trademark modernist styles of
Losey (self-conscious visuals) and Pinter (elliptical dialogue). Yet the
film’s indebtedness to the popular genre conventions and visual styles
of Gothic horror and film noir has long been neglected by film critics
and scholars.
Drawing upon theories of exile and genre, formalist analysis, and
postwar British cultural history, this talk examines how The Servant
subversively employs Gothic horror and film noir elements to create a
darkly satirical portrait of pre-Swinging London, which critiques
Macmillan-era conservative anxiety about impending social, sexual, and
political upheaval.
Book via:
https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/the-wind-of-change-blows-home-tickets-122377844427
→ In Conversation with the Centre for Film, Media, Discourse and
Culture: “Starting your PhD in Film”
Friday 4th December 2020, 16:00. With Dr Fran Pheasant-Kelly and Dr
Benjamin Halligan
Want some ideas of what you should be up to in that crucial first year?
What are good objectives for your first year of research? What can be
usefully achieved in this year? What should you be aiming not to do in
this year? What kind of online resources are useful? How big should a
Literature Review be? And more! Contact (b.halligan /at/ wlv.ac.uk) for invite.
→ “Thoughts on Picturing Weather and Climate
Wednesday 9th December 2020, 17:00.
Speaker: Professor John Peters, Maria Rosa Menocal Professor of English
and of Film and Media Studies, Yale University.
Weather, despite its reputation as fleeting and flighty, is one of the
most heavily mediated things we know. Via a ramble through some Dutch
and British landscape paintings and more recent technical images, I will
explore how pictures have embodied, represented, and brought forth
weather and climate.
Prof Peters’s books include The Marvelous Clouds: Towards a Philosophy
of Elemental Media (2015), Courting the Abyss: Free Speech and the
Liberal Tradition (2005), Mass Communication and American Social Thought
(2004) and Speaking into the Air: A History of the Idea of Communication
(1999).
Book via:
https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/thoughts-on-picturing-weather-and-climate-tickets-124694629995
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