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[Commlist] Atalante - CFP #34: The Migrant Archive: Studies on Migration through Film Archives
Wed Jul 07 20:32:08 GMT 2021
Atalante - CFP #34: *The Migrant Archive: Studies on Migration
through Film Archives*
We are pleased to announce the call for papers of issue 34 of
/L’Atalante. Revista de Estudios Cinematográficos/ which, under the
title of “*The Migrant Archive: Studies on Migration through Film
Archives*”, is open to contributions. Executive Issue Editors: Josetxo
Cerdán and Miguel Fernández Labayen (Universidad Carlos III de Madrid).
You can find detailed information at:
http://www.revistaatalante.com/index.php?journal=atalante&page=announcement&op=view&path%5B%5D=81
<http://www.revistaatalante.com/index.php?journal=atalante&page=announcement&op=view&path%5B%5D=81>
The period open for full article submissions between 5,000 and 7,000
words goes from November 1st to December 10th 2021. The issue will be
published in July 2022 and there are no article processing costs charged
to authors.
We sincerely hope that this information may be of your interest. Please
feel free to share this call among your contacts. Thank you in advance.
/L’Atalante. Revista de estudios cinematográficos/
http://www.revistaatalante.com <http://www.revistaatalante.com>
(info /at/ revistaatalante.com) <mailto:(info /at/ revistaatalante.com)>
<mailto:(info /at/ revistaatalante.com) <mailto:(info /at/ revistaatalante.com)>>
*THE MIGRANT ARCHIVE: STUDIES ON MIGRATION THROUGH FILM ARCHIVES*
**
Acceptance of articles for the “Notebook” section: * November 1st to
December 10th 2021*
Historically, cinema has been associated with migration phenomena since
its earliest days, when it became the first form of audiovisual
entertainment to transcend boundaries and language barriers and be
established as an essentially mobile medium, in terms of both production
(from the first Lumière camera operators to the large waves of
immigrants working in Hollywood, for example) and consumption (with
large numbers of displaced peoples and exiles being among the first
regular film-goers around the world, as a form of socialisation through
a public event) (Allen, Gomery, 1995). In general, apart from some
attention to specific cases (e.g. the massive emigration of German
directors and cinematographers to Hollywood during the interwar period),
it would not be until the 1990s that film studies would begin focusing
on phenomena of human mobility as an essential component for
understanding the history of cinema. Research in this area would be
associated specifically with multiculturalism and post-colonialism, with
particular importance given to studies centred on exile, diaspora and
migrant experiences (Shohat, Stam, 1994, 2003; Naficy, 1999, 2001). It
was no coincidence that studies like these should begin to appear around
the same time as the rise to prominence of work by professional
filmmakers creating filmic discourses related to their experience as
migrants (or that of their families) in countries with consolidated film
industries like the United Kingdom, France, Germany and the United
States. Collectively these filmmakers have developed a set of concepts
that are fundamental to the idea of “cinema of mobility” as a political
movement, both in terms of access to representations of migrants and at
the level of the potential development of alternative modes of
production and distribution that can destabilise the hegemony of
Hollywood and the big media corporations (Iordanova, Martin-Jones,
Vidal, 2010).
Perhaps the most interesting aspect of this new field of research lies
in the step forward made by researchers in connecting and transferring
knowledge to the social sphere. In other words, driven by the eminently
social focus of the research on migrant, exile and refugee processes, at
a certain point film studies dealing with cinema of mobility began
advocating a critical intervention in the public space. This
intervention is underpinned by the creation of a “living archive” out of
sounds and images of mobility (Grossman, O’Brien, 2007) and responds to
the need to compile, analyse and render visible the migration practices
mediated by the cinema, understood as a socio-cultural institution and
as a way of life (Biletereyst, Maltby, Meers, 2019).
In this context, the intersection between human migrations and film and
audiovisual archives becomes a key element for analysing the ways in
which cinema and audiovisual media have mediated the construction of
identities, political conflicts and historiographic readings of
different phenomena associated with human displacement and film
cultures. With this in mind, recent (and not so recent) research on
found footage, cinema of appropriation and “archivology” (Bonet, 1993;
Baron, 2014; Russell, 2018) as historiographic, creative and narrative
ways of examining migration flows constitutes one of the pivotal points
for this issue of /L’Atalante. Revista de estudios cinematográficos/. At
the same time, these aesthetic readings will be complemented in this
issue by perspectives that expand and reassess the use of film archives
as a cultural heritage, in terms of both exhibition and access. In the
case of archives on migration, these perspectives expand on concepts and
values related to the role of film libraries beyond their traditional
national boundaries (Fossati, 2009; García Casado, Alberich Pascual,
2014; Andersson, Sundholm, 2019) and constitute the other main focus
that this issue seeks to explore. In short, the issue will consider how
different archives frame, organise and give meaning to international
migrations and how we can intervene in these processes as communication
researchers and scholars.
Submissions dealing with the following areas are welcome:
1. Case studies of film archives and collections related to migration.
2. Aesthetic questions and issues related to the use of archives on
migration in films and creative works.
3. Methods for examining and organising the archive as a repository or
database of films and materials that deal with migration, including
processes of digitalisation, geolocation, or datafication of migrant
archives.
4. Archives as a trigger for migrant history and memory, both through
their creative use in found footage films as well as through the writing
of critical historiographies that question the different national and
local histories.
5. Self-archiving among migrant populations.
6. Experiences of dissemination, presentation, education, programming
and curating of archives on migration.
7. De-colonial, post-colonial, racial, queer, feminist and/or
ecocritical perspectives on film archives related to migration.
8. Analysis of tropes, motifs and narratives in migrant archives.
9. Studies of migrant archives as part of broader film cultures,
including distribution and reception processes of those archives.
10. Research on the affects, subjectivities and institutional dynamics
of migrant archives.
One aim of this issue is to open migrant archives to all kinds of
transnational connections, critical historiographies and political
practices that reflect and act on processes of creation, consolidation,
preservation and dissemination of migration cinema. In this sense, the
migrant archive is understood as a “research laboratory” (Fossati, Van
Den Oever, 2016), inviting academics, creators, archivists and cultural
managers to share their experiences of film collections and migration.
*References*
**
Allen, R. C., Gomery, D. (1995). /Teoría //y Práctica de la Historia del
Cine/. Barcelona: Paidós.
Andersson, L. G., Sundholm, J. (2019). /The Cultural Practice of
Immigrant Filmmaking. Minor Immigrant Cinemas in Sweden 1950-1990/.
Bristol, Chicago: Intellect.
Baron, J. (2014). /The Archive Effect. Found Footage and the Audiovisual
Experience of History/. Londres, Nueva York: Routledge.
Biltereyst, D., Maltby, R., Meers, P. (eds.) (2018)./The Routledge
Companion to New Cinema History/: /Approaches and case studies./ Nueva
York: Routledge.
Bonet, E. (ed.) (1993). /Desmontaje: Film, Vídeo / Apropiación,
Reciclaje/. Valencia: IVAM; MNCARS; Arteleku; Kijkhius. World Wide Video
Festival & CGAI.
Fossati, G. (2009). /From grain to pixel. The archival life of film in
transition/. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.
Fossati, G., Van Den Oever, A. (eds.) (2016). /Exposing the Film
Apparatus. The Film Archive as a Research Laboratory/. Amsterdam:
Amsterdam University Press.
García-Casado, P., Alberich-Pascual, J. (2014). Origen y desarrollo de
la actividad filmotecaria en España. Implementación y singularidad del
mapa filmotecario español ante el nuevo contexto digital (1954-2012).
/Historia y Comunicación Social/, /19/, 279-289.
Grossman, A., O’Brien, Á. (eds.) (2007). /Projecting Migration:
Transcultural Documentary Practice/. Londres: Wallflower.
Iordanova, D., Martin-Jones,**D., Vidal, B. (2010). /Cinema at the
Periphery/. Detroit: Wayne State University Press.
Naficy, H. (ed.) (1999). /Home, Exile, Homeland. Film, Media, and the
Politics of Place/. Nueva York, Londres: Routledge.
Naficy, H. (2001). /An accented cinema: exilic and diasporic
filmmaking/. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press/./
Rusell, C. (2018). /Archiveology. Walter Benjamin and Archival Film
Practices/. Durham, Londres: Duke University Press.
Shohat, E., Stam, R. (1994). /Unthinking Eurocentrism: Multiculturalism
and the Media/. Nueva York: Routledge.
Shohat, E., Stam, R. (eds.) (2003). /Multiculturalism, Postcolonialism,
and Transnational Media/. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.
/L'Atalante. Revista de estudios cinematográficos/ accepts submissions
of unpublished essays on topics related to film theory and/or praxis
that stand out for their innovative nature. Articles should focus on
approaches to the cinematographic fact made preferably from the
perspectives of historiography or audiovisual analysis. Those texts that
approach novel objects of study with rigorous and well-evidenced
methodologies will be appreciated. Articles that take as their main
reference the processes of signification through the analysis of the
audiovisual form and/or the narratological elements specific to our
field, focusing on methodologies specifically related to the treatment
of the image will be favoured in the selection process. Although we
accept works with other methodologies that approach the filmic fact from
transversal perspectives (Cultural Studies, philological approaches,
etc.) we consider that the main interest of the journal is located on
the studies that take the specifically cinematographic expressive tools
as the main elements of discourse. Likewise, texts that are not limited
to describing, enumerating or summarizing details of the plot, but that
rigorously apply a specific and well-evidenced analysis methodology,
reaching particular and novel results, will be given priority.
Below are a few aspects to keep in mind:
·Submissions must be original and must conform to the submission
guidelines of the journal:
http://www.revistaatalante.com/index.php?journal=atalante&page=about&op=submissions
<http://www.revistaatalante.com/index.php?journal=atalante&page=about&op=submissions>
·Submissions will be evaluated for the originality of the topic
explored, especially if it relates to an issue not previously addressed
in the publication. Submissions dealing with topics previously addressed
in the journal may be rejected. The content of the issues published to
date can be consulted on the journal's website.
·All submissions will undergo an external peer review process that will
respect the anonymity of both authors and reviewers (double blind peer
review) in an effort to prevent any possibility of bias. In the event of
a very high number of submissions, the Editorial Board will make a prior
selection of the articles to be peer reviewed, choosing the articles
deemed the most appropriate for the issue.
·Articles (which should be between 5,000 and 7,000 words including all
sections) must be submitted via the website of the journal as .rtf, .odt
or .docx files, using the template provided for this purpose. Files
containing the author's statement (.pdf) and any images (.psd, .png,
.jpg, .tiff) must be uploaded to the website as complementary files. A
detailed version of the submission guidelines can be found at the
following link:
http://www.revistaatalante.com/index.php?journal=atalante&page=about&op=submissions
<http://www.revistaatalante.com/index.php?journal=atalante&page=about&op=submissions>
·The selected articles will be published in a bilingual edition (Spanish
and English).
For more information: (info /at/ revistaatalante.com)
<mailto:(info /at/ revistaatalante.com)>
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