[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[Commlist] Symposium: Feminists Making Movies Between Theory and Practice
Tue Apr 04 07:21:23 GMT 2023
*Call For Presentations*
*Symposium: Feminists Making Movies Between Theory and Practice*
Date: 19th of July, 2023.
Location: Arts West, University of Melbourne.
Feminist film theory has developed in uneven relation to feminist
filmmaking. Initially prescriptive in its commentary, the field has
since attended to a variety of practices and multiplied its analytical
frameworks. Strangely absent from such work, however, is a dimension of
self-reflexivity. Feminist film theory has done little to reflect on its
influence on relevant practitioners, or indeed the role of the feminist
filmmaker in the formation of its own paradigms. This one-day symposium
aims to populate this critical gap, exploring the commerce between
feminist film theory and practice across film history.
It is true that feminist film theory and practice have worked well
together at certain historical moments. Perhaps most famously, Laura
Mulvey put the ideas explored in her//written manifesto, “Visual
Pleasure and Narrative Cinema” (1975), into action in her avant-garde
film, /Riddles of the Sphinx /(1977). More recently, Céline Sciamma paid
tacit homage to Mulvey as she characterised /Portrait of a Lady on Fire
/(2019) as an exercise in the construction of a “female gaze”. Just as
often, however, feminist film writing and making have existed in awkward
opposition to one another. Experimental filmmakers such as Barbara
Hammer, Marjorie Keller and Agnés Varda have been vocal about the role
of the academy in the misrecognition, devaluation, or suppression of
their work. Where these filmmakers depend on that space for viewership,
legitimacy and even funding, the prejudices of feminist criticism carry
very real weight. Recent developments in cinema studies have inverted
this dynamic again. Once-key critics suggest that feminist film theory
no longer exists as a distinct mode of inquiry but has instead become
enfolded into parallel investigations (L. Williams, 2004). It could thus
be said that feminist work within the academy depends now, more than
ever, on feminist practice for its survival.
This symposium explores the relay between feminist film theory and
feminist film practice. We intend “feminist” to refer to the disposition
of the thinker or maker, who may or may not be woman-identifying. While
the organisers recognise the importance of temporal markers for a
counter field like feminism, we hope that papers will adopt a flexible
relation to history, one that looks back to the 1970s and earlier, as
well as forward to the future. While investigations within the realm of
experimental cinema are of particular interest to the symposium, we also
welcome submissions focused on documentary and narrative (feature or
short) forms. Moreover, we are especially keen on submissions that
explore the interchange between feminist film theory and practice in a
local context, within Australia and New Zealand.
Topics may include, but are certainly not limited to:
* Productive, fraught, or otherwise dynamic relations between feminist
film theory and practice (from early cinema to the present)
* Proto-feminist film theory, or looking back on earlier practices
through the lens of feminist film theory
* Women filmmakers who also write about film (e.g., Germaine Dulac,
Maya Deren, Marjorie Keller, Abigail Child, Peggy Ahwesh)
* Seminal feminist texts that inspired directions in feminist thought
(e.g., /Jeanne Dielman 23 quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles /[1975]
and feminist temporalities; /The Watermelon Woman /[1996] and
feminist archives)
* Problems or developments in archiving and restoration for the course
of feminist film theory and/or practice
* Advents in film technology that have informed feminist film theory
*Keynote Lecture: Professor Sarah Keller, University of Massachusetts
Boston.*
Please email an abstract (250 words) and short bio to Wendy Haslem
(wlhaslem /at/ unimelb.edu.auby) the 1^st of May, 2023.
Organising Committee: Dr Alicia Byrnes, Professor Sarah Keller and
Associate Professor Wendy Haslem.
---------------
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/ commlist.org)
URL: http://nicocarpentier.net
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]