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[ecrea] UPenn German Graduate Film Conference: Geist and the Machine
Sat Dec 01 20:12:01 GMT 2012
University of Pennsylvania
Department of Germanic Languages and Literatures
Graduate Student Conference 2013
Geist and the Machine: A Graduate Student Conference on German Cinema
and Film Theory
Keynote: Gertrud Koch, Freie Universität Berlin
Submission due date: January 15th, 2013
Conference date: March 15th, 2013
The German term Geist bears no simple translation into English. From
spirit to mind to ghost to intellect, it exists both as a singular
philosophical concept and an elusive shapeshifter. In The Spirit of
Film, Béla Balázs writes that “the camera can photograph the
unconscious,” citing cinema’s ability to use technology in order to
reveal immaterial thoughts and desires, while placing it in a
penetrating relationship to the idealist and invisible nature of Geist.
Throughout film’s relatively short history, discussion and theorizing of
the impact of the intrusive nature of the medium on individuals and
society at large has remained ever-presently suspect. Yet writers such
as Walter Benjamin offer an alternative approach to this seemingly
symptomatic problem by proposing that the film actor is not exploited by
technology, but rather “preserve[s] one’s humanity in the face of the
apparatus,” and futhermore, offers the spectator a chance to regain
one’s own humanity by proxy. This conference seeks to animate the debate
surrounding film’s value for society by exploring the relationship
between technology and imagination as illuminated by cinema.
While the focus of the conference is on German cinema and film theory,
we encourage submissions from other disciplines, not limited to: art
history, cinema studies, media studies, philosophy, history,
communications, sociology, comparative literature, and theology. We
welcome topics on the translation of German film theory and its
influence, non-German films and theoretical writing inspired by the
German film canon and its deviations, and methodologies that question
cinema as an institution and its relationship to marginalized
spectators. We also welcome submissions from practicing film-makers,
animators, and video artists whose work is influenced by the German
philosophical tradition of Geist and the technological experimentation
of German directors.
Please feel free (but not obliged) to use the following broad themes as
a springboard:
- early German film and theoretical writing (visualizing the speed and
movement of industrialism, anxiety over relationship between the human
and the machine between the World Wars, landscape/cityscape in early film)
- filming the unconscious (the uncanny, film’s potential to depict
alternative desires and modes of subjectivity, Benjamin’s optical
unconscious)
- film technology and film-making (the production process, the filmic
actor, the impact of advances of camera technology, relationship between
sound and image)
- representation of the immaterial in the material world (the
relationship between the spiritual and technology, the camera as a
demiurgical eye)
Please send your 250-300 word abstracts in both the body of the e-mail
and as an attachment to Jehnna Lewis and Roksana Filipowska at
(jehnna /at/ gmail.com) by midnight on January 15, 2013. Submissions should
include the paper title, author’s name, affiliation, and e-mail address.
Those whose submissions are accepted will be notified within the week.
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