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[Commlist] Seeking 4th Panelist for SCMS 2024 - "Enfleshment in the Fleischer Studios"
Fri Aug 25 20:58:59 GMT 2023
The panel “*/Enfleshment in the Fleischer Studios: Rendering Race and
Animating the Other/*” is seeking a fourth panelist for SCMS 2024 in
Boston. Please see further details in the CfP below.
If you are interested in being a part of this panel or have any
questions for clarification, please reach out at gentryb
[at]umich[dot]edu. Panelist proposals will not be considered after
August 28. **
With gratitude and best wishes,
Briand (Brinni) Gentry
she/her
Doctoral Candidate
Universtiy of Michigan – Film, Television, & Media
gentryb [at]umich[dot]edu
Panel CfP:
*/“Enfleshment in the Fleischer Studios: Rendering Race and Animating
the Other/*,” aims to curate a broad range of media historians,
theorists, and animation specialists to consider the role that race and
otherness play in making Fleischer Studios animations “work.”
In 1934, Fleischer Studios released a short film, /Betty Boop’s Rise to
Fame/, combining live-action footage of Max Fleischer and a reporter
with animations of Betty Boop moving around their office to perform a
revue of her song and dance numbers from her greatest hits: /Stopping
the Show /(1932), /Betty Boop’s Bamboo Isle/ (1932), and /The Old Man of
the Mountain/ (1933). In this nearly 9 minute short Boop herself
imitates Fanny Brice, performs her “I’m an Indian” in a sensualized
buckskin and papoose costume, crossdresses as she vocally mimics Maurice
Chevailler, rubs herself with ink from an inkwell to enter brownface as
she performs a Rotoscoped hula lifted from the performance of The Royal
Samoan’s lead dancer, Lotamuru, and finally proceeds to rid herself of
the ink-staining of her dermis so she can play the white damsel foil to
the lecherous Old Man of the Mountain (who is, significantly, voiced by
Cab Calloway). This short serves to condense a much larger pattern
within the Fleischer Studios where in ethnic and racialized talent were
incorporated into Boop’s sounds, somatics, and stylizations with full
acknowledgement of the original source material. In part to demonstrate
the prowess of the Fleischer developed Rotoscope, many Fleischer
animations (especially those of Betty Boop) open with live-action clip
featuring the labor that was Rotoscoped into Boop’s own vocalizations
and movements. Betty Boop herself was conceived as a quintessential
caricature of a Jazz Age flapper and, like many of the flapper icons
before her, racial appropriation and a certain play with fluidity (both
gendered and racialized) are the keys to her success as a continual
novelty. Like many flapper icons before her, Boop’s identity was
constantly in question – was she Black, Jewish, White? Was her
countenance lifted from Helen Kane, Baby Esther, or Josephine Baker? Why
is boop’s fluidly fashioned flesh such a factor in her appeal? As Anne
Anlin Cheng has stated, with regard to the Modernist fascination with
Josephine Baker’s constantly visible skin, “Baker’s
performances…challeng[ed] us to confront the ongoing dilemma of how to
see raced bodies at the intersection of historic materiality and early
century semiotics” (/Second Skin/, 175).
This panel seeks to examine the ways in which racial and ethnic
distinction, ambivalence, and fluidity are utilized in the full revue of
Fleischer Studios characters and shorts from */Betty Boop, Popeye/, and
/Koko the Clown/ to the /Color Classics/ Series, /Talkartoons/, and /Out
of the Inkwell/ shorts. *This panel will serve as a collected rumination
on the variety of ways a single animation studio makes use of
animation’s affordances in ways that illuminate how the coding of voice,
movement, and epidermal tinting operate to reveal the role that
fantasies of racial fluidity and masquerade serve in trying to pin down
race as something finite, durable, and legibly /Other/. By focusing on a
studio like Fleischer (1929-1942) which operated from the gradual
decline of silent cinema, through pre-code entertainments, and
essentially shuttered its doors during its consolidation with the studio
system and Paramount, this panel will offer a start at a thorough
investigation of how animation practices, labor, and the particular
invention of the Rotoscope all functioned to leverage racial fluidity as
a hallmark of the studio that once competed with Disney. As Nicholas
Sammond has meaningfully underscored, the history of animation
(particularly US animation) is intimately entwined with minstrelsy. What
do we make of a studio that acknowledges its appropriations as much as
it intensifies and deflects them? What can we come to understand about
the role fantasies of racial fluidity and fixity played and continue to
play in the US mediascape by examining how an animation studio like
Fleischer relied on the labor, creativity, and aestheticizations of
groups considered Other to secure its spot in the mainstream? Why is
animation fixated on epidermal inscription? How is race rendered by
animation’s technologies? How is objecthood defied or reified in animation?
Approaches to this topic and research angles might include, but need not
be limited too:
-Animation technologies
-Animation history
-Examinations of the various ways in which raced labor was featured and
Rotoscoped in Fleischer animations
-Gender/sexuality
-Music/Musicology/Music History
-Racialized/Ethnicized Performance Theory
-Racialized/Ethniczed Performance History (ie theories and histories
surrounding US minstrelsy, yellowface performance, and various other
modes of racial masquerade)
-Jewish performance history
-Objecthood
-Kitsch theory
-Aesthetics of epidermalization
Please send a brief topic proposal, title, and 3-5 bibliographic sources
to gentryb [at]umich[dot]edu. If your paper is selected you should know
within 24 hours of sending your email to me. Should your paper be
selected, I request that you get a 2500 character abstract to me along
with a brief author bio by no later than August 29.
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