[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[Commlist] CFP Ingmar Bergman out of focus: translations, receptions & interpretations
Tue Nov 16 20:43:49 GMT 2021
CFP international workshop:**
*Ingmar Bergman out of focus***
Translations, Receptions & Interpretations**
In Spring 2022, Örebro University will hold an international workshop
focusing on the rich interpretations that Ingmar Bergman's work has been
generating over the last seven decades, and on the impact of Ingmar
Bergman on and in film history and in different cultural contexts.
Being one of the main representatives of European modernist cinema,
Ingmar Bergman’s oeuvre has been the subject of heated debate and
various readings. The rapid canonization of his work after his
international breakthrough in 1956 has tended to reinforce an
interpretation of Bergman as "the auteur", usually written from a high
art perspective. As Bergman-scholar Maaret Koskinen repeatedly pointed
out, discourses around Bergman were always a mix between high art and
the popular, both at home in Sweden and abroad. His films attracted a
variety of audiences seeking redemptive messages, liberal agendas,
religious transcendence, and/or eroticism. Beyond his titles, Bergman's
strong public image as quintessential modernist filmmaker has usually
functioned as a productive intersection of (sometimes contradictory)
images, interests and discourses. Bergman has been alternatively seen as
an artist, the main voice of Swedish cinema, a creative genius between
cinema and other media, a transcendental artist or a clown, as well as a
danger to the national youth, a source of moral disorder or a ‘too
theatrical’ filmmaker. Given the different (national) contexts and time
periods, one could argue that each audience has generated its own ‘Bergman’.
This workshop aims to bring together scholars interested in shedding
light on some of these contexts and film cultures, as we believe that
understanding Ingmar Bergman’s interpretations is also a productive way
of understanding how a significant part of film history has been seen
and commented on, adopted and adapted, written and read. Bergman was a
filmmaker, but for cinephiles, critics, and audiences around the word he
was also more than that: the images projected on the Swedish auteur
function as a telling example that film history can not be just reduced
to a history of its films. In this regard, this symposium sees itself as
a timely contribution to the analysis of /film culture/, that is, the
institutions, discourses, places and practices that are not films but
without which there would be no films. This relates, in the tradition of
New Cinema History, to the cinema as a site of cultural exchange, but it
also goes beyond and includes discourses in specialized magazines,
practices at institutions such as film clubs, festivals, film schools
etc. New Cinema History as a field is in nature transdisciplinary – a
variety we wish to maintain in our workshop – such as memory and oral
history research, social and economic historiography, geography, social
anthropology, ethnography, cultural and memory studies, and area/urban
studies. We therefore encourage participants from a variety of academic
backgrounds to participate (such as, but not limited to, film and media
studies, anthropology, art and cultural history). Additionally, we aim
to include global, comparative, and/or peripheral perspectives on this
topic.
Considering these aspects, this workshop is interested in contributions
that could, but are not limited to, illuminate some of the following
subjects:
* A Swedish auteur: Bergman’s reception in different local and/or
national film cultures & political climates;
* International, transnational, world cinema; Bergman as brand:
commerce of auteurism;
* Audience reception in terms of admissions, circulation, oral
history, emotional experiences;
* High and Low: Critical reception, cinephilic anxieties, canonisation;
* Artistic reinterpretations of Bergman (adaptations and remakes);
* Gendered audiences, gendered history; women portrayed by men;
* Religious interpretations / catholic vs protestant;
* Paratextual information informing the interpretations;
* Beyond the auteur / back to the auteur? Contemporary readings on
Bergman;
* And Bergman in popular cinema, TV and other media.
The *workshop *will take place *29 & 30 April 2022*, and will be held at
Örebro University, with the option of participating online. *Jan
Holmberg, CEO of the Ingmar Bergman Archive in Stockholm*, will give a
keynote presentation.
In conjunction with the workshop, a follow-up volume in a leading
academic publishing house is planned.
Please submit full contact information, a short biography that explains
your background and field (of no more than 300 words) and an abstract
(of no more than 500 words) on the topic you would like to work on to
the following address: (IBoutoffocus /at/ gmail.com)
The call for papers will close on *01.12.2021.* The authors of selected
contributions will be notified by 15.01.2022 if the proposal has been
accepted.
---------------
The COMMLIST
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier. Please use it responsibly and wisely.
--
To subscribe or unsubscribe, please visit http://commlist.org/
--
Before sending a posting request, please always read the guidelines at http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
URL: http://nicocarpentier.net
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]