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[Commlist] The (Un)bearable Lightness of Media CfP - XXIX FilmForum Film and Media Studies conference
Thu Jul 14 08:49:33 GMT 2022
XXIX FilmForum - International Film and Media Studies Conference
November 2nd – 4th 2022, Udine (IT)
The (Un)bearable Lightness of Media.
Critical Approaches to “Sustainability” in Film and Audiovisual
Production,
Circulation and Preservation
Deadline: August 30th, 2022
Email: (udineconference /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(udineconference /at/ gmail.com)>
As an increasingly crucial concept recurring in the public domain as
well as in transnational cooperation politics, “sustainability” is not
only an ambitious societal goal but also a key-term (and, to some
extent, a buzzword) that has begun entering and reshaping the agenda
of Film and Media practitioners, critics and scholars. The XXIX
FilmForum edition will be devoted to question the many possible
meanings of this notion whenever applied to the realm of media, by
moving from two crucial areas and perspectives of
inquiry
Ecological Sustainability. Film, Media and the Environment. In the
last decade or so, ecocriticism and ecomaterialism have taken shape as
the two alternative approaches for tackling film and environmental
sustainability. Scholars in this field have focused alternatively on
issues of representation (Cubitt 2020; Willoquet & Maricondi 2010) or
on the material impact that film and television production and
distribution practices have on the biophysical world (Vaughan 2019;
Kääpä 2018; Starosielski & Walker 2016; Bozak 2012). Taking cue from
these distinct strands of reflection, we encourage on the one hand
ecocritical discussion about how film and media offered
representations of natural or human-provoked catastrophes,
utopian or dystopian futures caused by climate change (Kaplan 2016),
environmental issues (Olausson & Berglez 2014) and how they
contributed to raising environmental awareness (Parham 2016). On the
other hand, ecomaterialist approaches may assess either the way in
which film or media industries have been participating in
capitalist-fossil fueled economies, weighting on the mining (Parikka
2015; Wan 2019) and the extraction of raw materials (Grieveson &
Jaikumar 2021) and to the production of waste (Zimanyi 2022), or the
increasingly relevant of environmental awareness underlying the field
of film and media production.
Media Sustainability. Economies, Politics and Infrastructures. The
notion of sustainability doesn’t exclusively include environmental
issues but also presents political, ethical, and economic
implications. The discussion can thus be furthered to all the logics
by which film and media production, circulation and preservation
organize their own “resources”, be them hardware or content-related,
laborers or consumers’, human or non-human. >From a materialist point
of view, the sustainability of media can be measured through an
“infrastructural approach”, focusing on short-term marginal and local
practices or on the longstanding maintenance policies through which
socio-technical systems are kept “alive” (Krebs & Weber
2021). The awareness that “we are never looking solely at media”
(Mattern 2015) but dealing instead with a complex of human
communities, tacit knowledges and techno-cultural assemblages, calls
also for a deeper understanding of gender, race, class, labour and
geopolitical inequalities, and to which extent they are implied in the
archiving, access and distribution of resources and data. Moreover, a
different perspective, a re-thinking of the proliferation,
accumulation, reuses and misuses of images may raise questions on the
cultural and ethical sustainability of affective visual ecologies
(Shaviro 2010; Ivakhiv 2013; Weik von Mossner 2017) and of state of
saturation of the current iconosphere (Fontcuberta 2016). Following
Marran (2017)’s critique of ecocriticism our very concept of “visual
culture” must be radically reshaped, decentring the ethno-centric and
anthropo-centric views to make room also for animal and other
non-human elements.
As a final provocation, the discourse on sustainability can also take
a self-reflexive turn, interrogating the possibilities and forms of
developments of and within film and media studies. Digitisation
practices and “datafication” impact research habits and challenge
traditional qualitative approaches to knowledge, even in the
humanities (Schäfer & van Es 2017; Dencik 2020). Concurrently, our
field is increasingly migrating into other domains, and a dialectical
questioning between synchronic excavation and diachronic transmission
of knowledge arises (Keilbach & Pabiś-Orzeszyna 2021): as scholars,
how far can we go with mining and how should we deal with so much
cumulative knowledge, the preservation and transmission
of which is progressively less sustainable? How much can our networks
of data, knowledge and practice exchanges be considered sustainable,
in a material, conceptual and ethical sense? We encourage our scholar
community to confront these questions as integral part of a critical
assessment, that should be also
self-critical, of the concept and role of sustainability at large.
Starting from these general areas of interest, we encourage
contributions addressing (but not limited to)
the following topics:
* The role of cinema and media in building a“hydrocarbon imagination”
* Ecoimperialism and the media I: “exploitative” histories of media
and film industries
* Ecoimperialism and the media II: film and media in the public
image of extractive industries
* Media-Waste and Wasteful Media
* Ecojustice, Ecoinclusivity, Ecoactivism and the media
* Practices and policies of “greenwashing” in public media campaigns
* Greening film shooting and post-production
* Greening theatrical venues and cinema spaces
* Sustainability and alternative distribution networks, minor
archives, radical communities, local infrastructures
* Reuse, recycle and repair as sustainable practices in media and
audiovisual economies
* Sustainability and film/media archival infrastructures, economies,
preservation practices and policies
* Sustainability and transnational, transgeographical balances and
cooperation (North/South divide, East/West divide,
* rural/urban divide)
* Sustainability and archival and museum film and media objects
preservation, caregiving, and exhibition
* Sustainability and platform economy
* Sustainability and digitization, digital archiving, digital access
* Sustainability and scientific research (knowledge exchange,
sharing practices, digital humanities, datafication, and research
infrastructures in film and media studies)
We invite proposals for papers or panels of up to 700 characters with
spaces. Please make sure to attach a short biographical note (up to
400 characters for each contribution). The deadline for submission
is August 30th, 2022
To send your application and to ask for more information, please
contact us at (udineconference /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(udineconference /at/ gmail.com)>
The conference will be held in presence in Udine. The following
registration fees will be applied:
- Tenured professors: 50 Euros (Early Bird Registration) 70 Euros
(Full Registration)
- Lecturers and Researchers: 30 euros (Early Bird Registration) 45
Euros (Full Registration)
No fee will be charged for Ph.D. students and candidates.
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