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[Commlist] Frames Cinema Journal, Issue 18 "Phone Camera at the Intersection of Technology, Politics, and Transmedia Storytelling" published
Wed Jun 30 13:18:24 GMT 2021
*/Frames Cinema Journal/*
*Phone Camera
at the Intersection of Technology, Politics, and Transmedia Storytelling*
*Issue 18, Summer 2021*
**
*Co-Editors-in-Chief: *Lucia Szemetová and Jacob Browne
*Book Review Editor:* Anushrut Ramakrishnan Agrwaal
Dear colleagues,
It is with great enthusiasm which we announce that Issue 18 of /Frames
Cinema Journal /“*Phone Camera at the Intersection of Technology,
Politics, and Transmedia Storytelling
<http://framescinemajournal.com>*”, has now been published!
This issue centres on the phone camera, a device which has garnered
increasing attention, both as an effective political tool amidst recent
and current global events, and as an apparatus facilitating new
communicative strategies. For years, too closely associated with the
vernacular, the phone camera has evaded critical attention. However, the
varied formulations of phone camera recordings and their recycling
attract ever more scholarly attention. The phone camera offers a
particularly insightful viewpoint on changing modes of cinema, helping
to better understand the technological, ideological, and aesthetic
shifts through non-normative uses of visual media. This issue
contributes to the growing scholarship on the device and its use by
filmmakers, granting it the attention it deserves as a powerful and
creative deployment of modern technology.
The works included in this issue offer a range of timely studies of the
phone camera, looking at the intersections between phone footage as
narrative or aesthetic device in both documentary and fiction films. The
articles examine the ways in which the phone camera challenges the
boundaries of media studies, moving nimbly between platforms and
remediated formats; the phone camera’s ability to document major
political events from the ground up, from a panoply of perspectives; as
well as the transformative potential for the transnational dissemination
of such footage, and its consequent impact.
What is striking when surveying the articles and features collected here
is the sheer variety of issues and approaches suggested in
considerations of the phone camera. The utopian note sounded in
explorations of the phone camera as a vital part of the
citizen-activist’s toolkit is countered by its potential to allow the
tendrils of surveillance to reach further and further into our everyday
activities, its connectivity both liberating and confining its users.
Equally, the device’s accessibility yields not only new possibilities
for artistic or personal expression, but also a limitless potential for
artifice and inauthenticity, a world populated by catfishes, trolls and
fake news factories. No single keyword or theoretical gesture will
completely unlock the phone camera, and so it seems appropriate that
this issue has generated more featurettes and shorter pieces than
previous editions of /Frames/, as though the academic gaze itself is
unavoidably diffracted when directed through the lens of the phone camera.
Our *Features *section’s articles highlight the works of filmmakers
engaging with phone footage while also tracing a tension around identity
and the individual that emerges from the apparatus. Focusing on a named
and well-known theoretician-practitioner, *Lawrence Alexander* examines
the iPhone as both artefact and tool of media archaeological enquiry
through Hito Steyerl’s /Abstract/ (2012). *Tanya Shilina-Conte*, on the
other hand, focuses on Ana Nyma’s (Anonyme) documentary practice and
explores phone footage in the framework of global anonymous cinema.
Bridging the two, *Stefka Hristova *suggests the case study of smart
phone selfies, which operate both as portraits, expressive of personal
identity, and as data-prints, tools for tracking and tracing
individuals, arguing for a continuity between 19^th century
anthropometric processes and contemporary mass surveillance and
biometric enterprises.**
*
*
Our *POV* section presents exciting accounts of the possibilities
offered by the phone camera. It divides into two pairs of perspectives,
the first of which includes personal insights into the phone camera’s
role in projects aimed at fostering self-expression. Thus, *Samuel
Fernández-Pichel* reflects on the Patio 108 project, a collaborative
platform that relies on short video testimonies recorded with cell
phones mainly from the margins of Seville, from his dual perspective
both as a participant and as a researcher. *Iakovos Panagopulos* gives
his own professional insight on the Storylab’s series of
ethnomediaological workshops to Tejon Native Americans tribe members
using mobile devices to tell their stories. The second pair of POV
featurettes examine the role of the phone camera in the media circuit
around specific recent events. In her piece on the circulation of phone
footage of the August 4th 2020 Beirut port explosion, *samira
makki* reflects on the afterlife of death images in their recycling and
recirculation. *Jenny Gunn* examines the usage of the smartphone by
rioters documenting their participation in the insurrection of the
Capitol on January 6th, 2021.
The *Film Featurette* section brings into attention a number of key
films, both fiction and non-fiction, that are essential in any
discussion of phone camera scholarship. Again taking up the issue of
self-fashioning, *Tomas Elliott* considers the politics of sharing
selfies in /Visages Villages/ (2017), the ensemble piece from Agnès
Varda and photographer JR. Through /Midnight Traveler/ (Hassan Fazili,
2019), *Miche Dreiling* explores the aesthetic potentiality of handheld
footage, including use of the smartphone camera, in documentary film
practice. Similarly, *Max Bergmann* focuses on smartphone aesthetics in
/Buddha.mov/ (Kabir Mehta, 2017), functioning as a self-reflexive
commentary on documentary filmmaking and the mediation of oneself on
social media. Moving on to fiction films, *Alex Damasceno* considers the
aesthetic properties of the horror film /Sickhouse /(Hannah Macpherson,
2016), composed solely of 10-second Snapchat videos, and the ways in
which this formal approach defamiliarises the footage for the audience.
In our new *Scene Review* section, *Sam Thompson* takes up the issue of
realism in relation to the phone camera, analysing the final sequence of
Sean Baker’s /The Florida Project/ (2017), in which the film shifts to
iPhone footage, to argue how the film offers a self-conscious commentary
on the material conditions of filmmaking.
Finally, *Sarah Atkinson’s video essay* for this issue reflects visually
on smartphone aesthetics in recent mainstream cinema, in terms of both
subject matter and cinematography. It discussed films made on, for,
about and with smartphones.
Our *Book Review* section features reviews of Lee Grieveson’s */Cinema
and the Wealth of Nations/* (2018), David Martin-Jones’ */Cinema Against
Doublethink: Ethical Encounters with the Lost Pasts of World
History/* (2018), Lydia Papadimitriou and Ana Grgić’s edited collection
*/Contemporary Balkan Cinema: Transnational Exchanges and Global
Circuits /*(2020), Sady Doyle’s */Dead Blondes and Bad Mothers:
Monstrosity, Patriarchy and the Fear of Female Power /*(2019), Anna
Backman Rogers’ */Sofia Coppola: The Politics of Visual Pleasure
/*(2019), Dominic Lennard, R. Barton Palmer and Murray Pomerance’s
edited collection */The Other Hollywood Renaissance/* (2020), Jill
Murphy and Laura Rascaroli’s edited collection *Theorizing Film Through
Contemporary Art: Expanding Cinema* (2020), Olivia Khoo’s */Asian
Cinema: A Regional View/* (2020), Warren Buckland’s */Narrative and
Narration: Analyzing Cinematic Storytelling/*(2021), Libby Saxton’s */No
Power Without an Image. Icons Between Photography and Film/* (2021).
With this issue, we are delighted to also be publishing the dossier
*“Re-Discovering Kira Muratova”*, curated by *Dina Iordanova*. With this
dossier, *Iordanova *offers an introduction to Muratova in her preface,
and presents material emerging from the workshop *Kira Muratova @ St
Andrews (2020)*. An audio essay by *Victoria Donovan* muses on what
Muratova might have made of the age of lockdowns and social distancing,
while video essays by *Masha Shpolberg *and *Irina Schulzki* consider
her work in relation to the spaces of socialism and the cinema of
gesture respectively. Finally, a POV Featurette by *Raymond De
Luca* considers the blurring of distinctions between humans and
non-humans in Muratova’sChekhovian Motifs (2002).
*ISSUE 18: *
*TABLE OF CONTENTS*
*EDITORIAL*
Letter from the Editors
*FEATURE ARTICLES*
*Facing Off: From Abstraction to Diffraction in Hito Steyerl’s
/Abstract/ (2012)*
By Lawrence Alexander
*Phone Footage and the Social Media Image as Global Anonymous Cinema*
By Tanya Shilina-Conte
*Portraiture, Surveillance, and the Continuity Aesthetic of Blur*
By Stefka Hristova
*POV*
*The Smartphone Camera and Radical Urban Imaginaries in the (Post-)
Pandemic City: The Patio 108 Initiative*
By Samuel Fernández-Pichel
*Returning to your Roots: Use of Mobile Shooting in an Ethnomediaology
case study with the Tejon Native American Tribe in California*
By Iakovos Panagopoulos
**
*The Death Image as Commodity*
By samira makki
*Theorising Digital Self-Mediation and the Smartphone as Filmic
Apparatus after 6 January, 2021*
By Jenny Gunn
*FILM FEATURETTES*
*Selfie-Portraits: Agnès Varda, JR, and the Politics of Sharing*
By Tomas Elliott
*Rear-facing camera: Cell phone cinematography in Midnight Traveler
(Hassan Fazili, 2019)*
By Miche Dreiling
*Interfaces of Fiction: Buddha.mov (2017) and Smartphone Aesthetics*
By Max Bergmann
*Sickhouse and the “Snap Cinema”*
By Alex Damasceno
*SCENE REVIEWS*
*Escape to Totality: Realist Commitments in The Florida Project’s iPhone
Finale*
By Sam Thompson
*VIDEO ESSAYS*
*Smartphone Cinematics: Contextual Essay*
By Sarah Atkinson
**
*BOOK REVIEWS*
*Lee Grieveson: /Cinema and the Wealth of Nations: Media, Capital, and
the Liberal World System/*
Reviewed by Maria Fernanda Miño Puga
*David Martin Jones:/ Cinema Against Doublethink: Ethical Encounters
with the Lost Pasts of World History/*
Reviewed by Sanghita Sen
*/Contemporary Balkan Cinema: Transnational Exchanges and Global
Circuits; /**Lydia Papadimitriou and Ana Grgić//*
Reviewed by Anna Batori
*//*
*Sady Doyle:/ Dead Blondes and Bad Mothers: Monstrosity, Patriarchy and
the Fear of Female Power/*
Reviewed by Srishti Walia
*//*
*Anna Backman Rogers:/ Sofia Coppola: The Politics of Visual Pleasure/*
Reviewed by Ana Maria Sapountzi
*//*
*/The Other Hollywood Renaissance; Dominic Lennard, /**R. Barton Palmer
and Murray Pomerance*
Reviewed by Chris Horn
*/Theorizing Film Through Contemporary Art: Expanding Cinema; /**Jill
Murphy and Laura Rascaroli*
Reviewed by Sam Thomson
*Olivia Khoo:/ Asian Cinema: A Regional View/*
Reviewed by Paulina Zurawska
*Warren Buckland: /Narrative and Narration: Analyzing Cinematic
Storytelling/*
Reviewed by Matthew Bosica
*Libby Saxton: /No Power Without an Image: Icons Between Photography and
Film/*
Reviewed by Jonathan Winkler
*DOSSIER: Re-Discovering Kira Muratova*
*Kira Muratova: The Magnificent Maverick*
By Dina Iordanova
*Watching Muratova in a Time of Social Isolation*
By Victoria Donovan
*Deconstructing Socialism in the Early Films of Kira Muratova*
By Masha Shpolberg
*Touch and Sight in the Films of Kira Muratova*
By Irina Schulzki
*The Pig’s Gaze: Human-Animal Mutuality in Kira Muratova’s Chekhovian
Motifs*
By Raymond De Luca
Happy reading!
Lucia Szemetová and Jacob Browne
*Co-Editors-in-Chief*
*Special Thanks to:* Patrick Adamson, Sarah Artt, Jane Barnwell, Daniel
Binns, Olivia Booker, Matthew Bosica, Emre Caglayan, Fatima Chinita,
Ruth Farrar, James Fenwick, Dina Iordanova, George Larke-Walsh, Carla
Mereu Keating, Shana MacDonald, Barbara Majsa, Matilde Nardelli, Forrest
Pando, Steve Presence, Maria Fernanda Miño Puga, Tom Rice, Carolyn Tyler
La Rocco, Ana Maria Sapountzi, Zoë Shacklock, Maria Velez-Serna, Sam
Thomson, Leshu Torchin, Rebecca Trelease, Kim Walden, Jonathan Winkler,
Ellen Wright. *Without your hard work this issue would not have been
possible!*
**
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