Call for papers:  Untimely cinema: cinema out of 
time ? a special Issue of Screening the Past (2011)
Guest Editors: Jodi Brooks and Therese Davis
?Untimeliness deployed as an effective 
intellectual strategy, far from being a gesture 
of indifference to time, is a bid to reset time.? Wendy Brown, Edgework p.4
Over the last few years untimeliness has become 
an area of increasing interest across a number 
of disciplinary fields from political theory to 
performance studies. The work of Wendy Brown on 
untimeliness and critical theory, Jacques 
Derrida?s Spectres of Marx, and some of Jacques 
Rancière?s work have played an important role in 
this turn to the untimely. Film, which arguably 
has a privileged relationship to untimeliness, 
has often made an appearance in recent critical 
work on the untimely though this has primarily 
been in work from disciplines other than film 
theory.  This special issue of Screening the 
Past sets out to explore some of the various 
ways in which untimeliness underlies and informs 
cinema. We are interested in papers that explore 
films and/or cinema as ?out of time? in any of 
the various meanings of the phrase: out of time 
in the sense of running out of time (as for 
instance when, in the post-celluloid 
era,  cinema is understood as operating on 
?borrowed time?); out of time in the sense of 
being out of step (films or film practices that 
perform or summon an aesthetics of 
untimeliness); and out of time in the sense of 
being (seemingly) disconnected from the present, 
or out of history (as in film practices 
considered too marginal, too local, to be ?in? 
history, film practices that have been 
understood as belated, too early or too late, as out of step with history).
Paper proposals for papers of 5000-7500 words 
are sought on any of the following topics:
·      Aesthetics of untimeliness in particular films and/or film practices.
·      Films that have, or have had, an ?untimely? reception.
·      Untimely spectatorship/untimely 
spectatorial practices (including papers 
addressing the ways that changing forms of 
exhibition and distribution can produce untimely spectatorial practices).
·      The ways in which cinema shapes/has 
shaped our experiences of?and understandings of?untimeliness.
·      The ways that film might offer what Brown 
calls ?a different sense of the times and a 
different sense of time? (Brown 15), including 
both the current political times and the times 
of this particular moment in cinema?s history.
·      Film?s residues and returns through 
various forms of media convergence and/or 
through new sites and forms of exhibition.
We are also interested in papers that examine 
the discipline of film theory itself in relation to ideas of the untimely.
This issue aims to generate different ways of 
thinking about film and politics both by looking 
at how film, and indeed how film theory, can 
?reset? time and by looking at how cinema?s 
place in ?our times? is being proposed and understood.
Please send abstracts of 500 words to Dr Jodi 
Brooks 
(<mailto:(j.brooks /at/ unsw.edu.au)>(j.brooks /at/ unsw.edu.au)) 
or Dr Therese Davis 
(<mailto:(therese.davis /at/ arts.monash.edu.au)>(therese.davis /at/ arts.monash.edu.au)) 
by November 30th. Papers selected for publication will be due July 4th 2011.
Screening the Past is a refereed journal and is 
ranked an A* journal in the ARC-ERA rankings of 
international scholarly journals in both the 
Film, Television, and Digital Media category and 
the Historical Studies category.