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[ecrea] CFP SERCIA workshop Dijon 2013 Naming, Labelling, Addressing in English-speaking Films
Fri Nov 23 07:19:20 GMT 2012
CFP Atelier Études Filmiques / Film Studies workshop:
Appellation(s) dans le cinÉma anglophone
Naming, Labelling, Addressing in English-speaking Films
This year’s SERCIA workshop invites proposals from a broad range of
perspectives (film history, film economics, star studies, film genre
theory, film narratology, spectatorship and reception studies) that will
investigate the pragmatics of naming, labeling and addressing, conceived
as processes, in English-speaking films.
One line of investigation concerns the nature and function of titles
both as a component of the paratext and as a marketing device: the
relationship between the title of the source work and that of the film
(e.g. The Birth of a Nation (Griffith, 1915) adapted from Thomas Dixon’s
Clansman), the title and its iconography, the title and its poster, the
English title and its French translation (e.g. Dawn of the Dead (Romero,
1978) ® Zombie), and ultimately the title and the genre, i.e. its
(in)coherence and hence readability.
The naming of stars (e.g. Marilyn Monroe, Bugs Bunny) can also be
considered. Likewise, the perception or marketing of a work as a
television or cinema production is likely to influence its
interpretation, and individual directors are labeled differently
according to whether they have worked mostly for the cinema or for
television—think of Peter Watkins, Alan Clarke and Peter Kosminsky. The
history of cinema also includes dramatic moments when “naming names”
referred to specific political contexts—such as MacCarthyism—which have
provided subetexts or indeed open texts for particular films.
Talks can also pursue Rick Altman’s pragmatic approach to film genre by
considering the naming and labeling process that genrification entails
(e.g. according to Altman, “musical” was first used as an adjective in
1929-1930, while “a musical” was only used in 1933); the role played by
producers and critics in the construction of a genre and the labeling of
films—Charles O’Brien’s study of film noir is a case in point—as well as
the modes of address involved, namely the use value of the construction
of the genre (e.g. the “woman’s film” by feminist film critics in the
1980s).
Finally, talks can explore the pragmatics of naming, labeling and
addressing as they are represented within the diegesis—e.g. the names of
characters, name-calling or the labeling process, for instance, the
discrepancy between text and image when the bird constructs Alice as “a
serpent” in Alice in Wonderland (1951) or when Dolores Driscoll
constructs her neighbors the Ottos as “hippies” in The Sweet Hereafter
(Egoyan, 1997)—and especially insomuch as they potentially reflect the
film’s address to a real or an implied spectator (through the use of
subtitles, the voiceover or more implicit modes of address).
Psychoanalytical, cognitive and phenomenological approaches to
spectatorship will be considered and studies of television films and
series are welcome.
250-300-word abstracts, including a brief bibliography, in English or
French can be sent to Jean-François Baillon ((jfbaillon /at/ sfr.fr)), Gilles
Menegaldo ((gilles.menegaldo /at/ wanadoo.fr)) and David Roche
((mudrock /at/ neuf.fr)), along with a short biography.
Selected Bibliography
Altman, Rick. Film/Genre. London: BFI, 1999.
Chion, Michel. La Voix au cinéma. Paris: Cahiers du cinéma, 1984 [1982].
Derrida, Jacques. Otobiographies. L’enseignement de Nietzsche et la
politique du nom propre. Paris: Galilée, 1984-2005
---. Sauf le nom. Paris: Galilée, 1993 / 2006.
Mayne, Judith. Cinema and Spectatorship. London & New York: Routledge, 1993.
Moine, Raphaëlle. Les Genres du cinéma. Paris: Armand Colin, 2002.
O’Brien, Charles. “Film Noir in France: Before the Liberation.” Iris 21
(1996): 7-20.
Rouxel-Cubberly, Noëlle. Les Titres de films. Paris: Michel Houdiard, 2011.
Russell, Jesse and Ronald Cohn, ed. Intertitle. Book on Demand, 2012.
Sobchack, Vivian. The Address of the Eye: A Phenomenology of Film
Experience. Princeton, NJ: Princeton UP, 1992.
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