Archive for January 2025

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[Commlist] Open Screens 6.3: AHRC Hidden Industries (Special Issue) published

Mon Jan 13 23:40:51 GMT 2025



The editorial team at /Open Screens /would like to bring your attention to our last issue 6.3. AHRC Hidden Industries <https://www.openscreensjournal.com/issue/1297/info/>, which was published on the 30^th of December and has been guest-edited by Professor Emily Caston.


  *Volume 6 • Issue 3 • 2024 • AHRC Hidden Industries*

https://www.openscreensjournal.com/issue/1297/info/ <https://www.openscreensjournal.com/issue/1297/info/>

This special dossier contains articles arising from conversations and exchanges that took place between 2021 and 2023 in the Hidden Screen Industries Network, funded by a grant from the Arts and Humanities Research Council. The network premise was that the UK doesn't have a screen industry: it has many screen industries. Beyond the familiar worlds of feature film and broadcast television sit many more sectors - the sectors that produce music video, screen advertising, fashion film, branded content, industrial film, corporate video, adult film, medical and education film to name but a few. These sectors are as creative artistically and as productive economically as those that produce more mainstream media. Yet, compared to those, they are hidden screen industries. For this special dossier, network participants have authored or contributed to articles focused on their specialist ‘hidden’ sectors of UK screen history.

*Editor: ***Emily Caston

Emily Caston is Professor of Screen Industries and director of PRISM at the University of West London. Previously a board member Film London (2008-2015), and Executive Producer at Ridley Scott Associates, she is a member of BAFTA and contributes regularly to the Sky Arts Series Video Killed the Radio Star. In 2018 she curated the Thunderbird collection “Power to the People: 200 Landmark British Music Videos.” Caston has held research grants from the Arts and Humanities Research Council and British Academy, and publishes in Media Industries, Music, Sound, and the Moving Image, Journal of British Cinema and Television, and Alphaville: Journal of Film and Screen Media. Her books include Celluloid Saviours: Angels and Reform Politics in Hollywood Film (2009) and British Music Videos 1966 – 2016: Genre, Authenticity and Art (2020)

*Table of contents:*<https://www.openscreensjournal.com/article/id/18132/>


          1.Hidden Screen Industries: The ‘Known Unknown’ in Screen
          History.
          <https://www.openscreensjournal.com/article/id/18132/>Emily
          Caston. Introduction.
          <https://www.openscreensjournal.com/article/id/18125/>


          2.The Full Picture:  Perspectives on an Archaeology of British
          Screen Advertising Production
          <https://www.openscreensjournal.com/article/id/18125/>Emily
          Caston (Professor of Screen Industries and director of PRISM
          at the University of West London)
          <https://www.openscreensjournal.com/article/id/17695/>


          3.Soho’s ‘other’ film industry: Researching Hidden Screen
          Economies.
          <https://www.openscreensjournal.com/article/id/17695/>Oliver
          Carter (Professor of Creative Economies at the Birmingham
          Centre for Media and Cultural Research, Birmingham City
          University)<https://www.openscreensjournal.com/article/id/18074/>


          4.Medicine on Film: A British Case History.
          <https://www.openscreensjournal.com/article/id/18074/>Angela
          Saward (Member of the Curatorial and Public Practice Group at
          Wellcome Collection and PhD Candidate)
          <https://www.openscreensjournal.com/article/id/18210/>


          5.‘Taken by my wife’ – Challenging the Amateur/professional
          binary in Wessex Film and Sound Archive’s (WFSA) Early Films
          (1895-1922).
          <https://www.openscreensjournal.com/article/id/18210/>Zoe J
          Viney Burgess (Senior Research Fellow at the University of
West London)<https://www.openscreensjournal.com/article/id/17696/>


          6.Revealing and Concealing Oil: The Hidden Screen Industry of
          Animated Petroleum Films.
          <https://www.openscreensjournal.com/article/id/17696/>Malcolm
          Cook (Associate Professor of Film at the University of
          Southampton)
          <https://www.openscreensjournal.com/article/id/18039/>


          7.The Moving Picture Company: Innovators and Early Adopters of
          British Video Post-production.
          <https://www.openscreensjournal.com/article/id/18039/>Emily
          Caston (Professor of Screen Industries and director of PRISM
          at the University of West
          London)<https://www.openscreensjournal.com/article/id/17699/>


          8.Fashion Film and the Art and Archaeology of Screen
          Promotion.
          <https://www.openscreensjournal.com/article/id/17699/>Emily
          Caston (Professor of Screen Industries and director of PRISM
          at the University of West London) and Marketa Uhlirova (Reader
          in Fashion, Cinema and Visual Studies, University of the Arts
          London).<https://www.openscreensjournal.com/article/id/17692/>


          9.Roundtable Discussion: Policy, Data and the UK's Hidden
          Screen Industries
          <https://www.openscreensjournal.com/article/id/17692/>Emily
          Caston (Professor of Screen Industries and director of PRISM
          at the University of West London) with the collaboration of
          Patrick Russell (Head of Non-Fiction, British Film Institute
          National Archive), Steve Davies (CEO of the Advertising
          Producers’ Association, VP of Commercial Film Producers of
          Europe), Steve Garvey (CEO of research agency Moving Image),
          and Ian Cade (Research Manager at the British Film Institute
          Research & Statistics Unit (RSU))

Open Screens is the open-access journal affiliated to BAFTSS (British Association of Film, Television and Screen Studies) and is part of the Open Library of Humanities (OLH).


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