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[ecrea] CFP & new issue of Film History (Nontheatrical Film)
Tue Jan 28 17:35:18 GMT 2014
The latest issue of Film History (vol. 25, no. 4)--a special issue on
Nontheatrical Film--is now available, featuring a variety of new
articles that may be of interest to many readers:
* A Portal to the Outside World: Motion Pictures in the Penitentiary
(Alison Griffiths)
* Lenticular Spectacles: Kodacolor’s Fit in the Amateur Arsenal (Marsha
Gordon)
* Four Cents to Sea: 16mm, the Royal Canadian Naval Film Society, and
the Mobilization of Entertainment (Peter Lester)
* Grierson, the British Documentary Movement, and Colonial Cinema in
British Colonial Africa (Rosaleen Smyth)
* United States v. Twentieth Century-Fox, et al. and Hollywood’s Feature
Films on Early Television (Jennifer Porst)
* Documentary Educational Resources: A Brief Oral History (Scott MacDonald)
* EPHEMERATA: French Cinema Center Catalogue (circa 1938) (Gregory A.
Waller)
We hope you will enjoy reading this issue, which can be accessed on
JSTOR or Project MUSE:
http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2979/filmhistory.25.issue-4
http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/film_history/toc/fih.25.4.html
CFP: EPHEMERATA and RE-READINGS
This issue also includes the first installment of a semi-regular new
feature called Ephemerata. Motivated as much by the circulatory role of
eBay as by the ease of digitizing documents for online posting and the
research opportunities afforded by searchable archives like the Media
History Digital Library and the Internet Archive, Ephemerata offers
scans of photographs, postcards, pamphlets, brochures, and other
long-forgotten, discarded, or simply overlooked print material. These
orphaned items are here recirculated with an eye toward expanding the
scope—perhaps even generating debate—about what counts as primary
sources and how ephemeral material might be interpreted, contextualized,
and deployed. The items resurfacing in Ephemerata will be framed by a
brief scholarly commentary that blends annotation and speculation. Film
History welcomes your queries about Ephemerata, proposals concerning
specific items or types of material worth reproducing, and comments on
the historical and historiographical import of these highlighted orphans.
Our upcoming issue (vol. 26, no. 1) will introduce another new
semi-regular feature called Re-Readings, which is intended to
acknowledge, engage, and analyze the history of film history. Each
contribution to Re-Readings will offer a 5,000-7,500 word discussion of
a monograph initially published before 1960 that in some fashion takes
up the history of cinema. Focusing on a book that has come to occupy or
ought to occupy a privileged place for subsequent film historians, the
essays in Re-Readings might consider the monograph's conditions of
production and publishing history or the author's biography and
professional career, in addition to examining the claims, methods, and
broader import of the monograph. A substantial number of monographs
merit this type of reconsideration, particularly once we include books
not originally published in English, biographies, and first-person
accounts. We welcome proposals for contributions to Re-Readings as well
as suggestions for monographs worth another look.
All the best,
David Church
Assistant Editor, Film History
(filmhist /at/ indiana.edu)
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