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[ecrea] cfp "Figurations of Intermediality in Film " Conference
Thu Jun 19 21:00:18 GMT 2014
Figurations of Intermediality in Film
XV. Film and Media Studies Conference inTransylvania
Cluj-Napoca, October 24-26, 2013.Deadline for proposals: 30 June, 2014.
CALL FOR PAPERS
Intermediality has emerged as one of the major theoretical issues of
contemporary thinking about film bringing a fresh view upon the ways in
which the moving pictures can incorporate forms of all other media, and
can initiate “dialogues” between the distinct arts. The most important
works on cinematic intermediality so far have targeted the notion of
intermediality both as a general concept and as a specific rhetoric in
the works of individual artists (like Peter Greenaway or Jean-Luc
Godard). Surveying the current cinematic “landscape” we may encounter
some astonishing films that seem to have been designed on the principle
of dismissing a conventional, “self-effacing” style (to use Bordwell’s
term for classical cinema) in favour of forging an explicitly
intermedial visual rhetoric. From the experimental, avant-garde canon to
some current examples of mainstream, “hypermediated” digital cinema,
from painterly movies bordering on installation art (like Lech
Majewski’s The Mill and the Cross or The Roe’s Room), to so-called “slow
cinema” projects, such films challenge us in finding the adequate
theoretical framework for analysis.
By organizing this conference we would like to initiate a wider
discussion among scholars whose researches may be connected to the idea
of inter-media relations in moving images and are engaged in deeper
explorations into the poetics of intermediality in film. In doing so we
wish to bring into the spotlight one of the key aspects of
intermediality:the fact that intermediality as such always manifests
itself as a kind of “figuration” in film through which medial
differences are visibly and self-reflexively “re-inscribed” within the
moving image, and that in general, philosophical terms, intermediality
can even be conceived as belonging to the domain of the “figural” in the
sense used by Lyotard, and elaborated by D. N. Rodowick in his book
Reading the Figural (in which he claims the “figural” to be a kind of
interface for media relations in film).
In the past few decades there have been several important theoretical
works that have dealt with the ways in which moving images operate
within a network of interrelated media and with instances in which the
boundaries between individual media and arts have been effectively
blurred through techniques that enable the features of one medium to
resurface within another, and which may offer theoretical vantage points
for analyzing possible figurations of intermediality. We may list here
studies re-evaluating cinema’s connections to traditional forms of
visual arts (e.g. Angela Dalle Vacche’s, Susan Felleman’s, Belén
Vidal’s, Steven Jacobs’s works on cinema and painting, or theoretical
analyses of the figuration of the tableau vivant in cinema in seminal
books by Brigitte Peucker, Pascal Bonitzer, Joachim Paech, etc.), but
also the recent studies referring to the relationship of cinema and
photography (e.g. Damian Sutton, Garrett Stewart, Régis Durand, David
Campany, etc.), and implicitly to the relationship of stillness and
motion within cinema, along with analyses of the connections between
cinema, video and installation art (e.g. Raymond Bellour, Yvonne
Spielmann, etc.).
In the context of shifting paradigms in film poetics from stylistic
patterns of modern or postmodern cinema towards what we may term as
“post-media cinema,” the figural aspects of intermediality also manifest
new forms that may require a search for further theoretical perspectives
for identifying and interpreting techniques that figurate intermedial
relations. In doing so, perhaps, we should also keep in mind that
although intermediality often occurs as a form of aesthetic detachment
or as some sort of hypermedia ornamentalism, such figurations can also
insist on “tangibility,” or, as Brigitte Peucker reminds us in her book,
The Material Image. Art and the Real in Film (2007), on “the merger of
representation with reality,” both through establishing the viewers’
intimacy with the medium and through the performative potential of such
figures to produce an increasingly haptic cinema, a cinema of “sensual
excess” in which the “body” of the medium and the mediation of bodies
and sensations sometimes become intertwined in ways that may suggest a
rethinking of the figurations of intermediality from the perspective of
phenomenology or visual anthropology, and so on. As such, intermedial
figurations may be conceived as open to a wide range of philosophical,
aesthetical, ideological, historical, and media theoretical
interpretations that we hope papers presented at this conference will
explore.
Proposals are invited to address (but are not limited to) the following
questions either from a theoretical point of view or through concrete
analyses:
· Intermediality and the figurations of
intermediality in film from a theoretical perspective:
a) theories of intermediality and intermedial figurations (film and
media theoretical, philosophical approaches, psychoanalysis, visual
anthropology etc.);
b) intermediality and the concept of “the figural” and “figuration” as
discussed by Lyotard, Deleuze, Rodowick, etc.
· The rhetoric of intermedial cinema, art theoretical and aesthetical
considerations: figuration and (dis)figuration, mise-en-abyme and
embedding, intermediality and metalepsis, the tableau vivant in cinema,
possible trans-medial “adaptations” of traditional rhetorical
figures/tropes (e.g. ekphrasis, hypotyposis, etc.),
· Intermediality and inter-sensuality in film: figures that merge
“hypermediacy” with “immediacy,” the represented and sensed body as a
site of intermedial figurations, etc.
· Remediated images as figurations of intermediality and
post-mediality: recontextualization as/and remediation, reframing, media
collage, remix, etc.
· Figurations of intermediality as imprints of (and meditations upon)
history and time, cultural and personal identity or intercultural exchange:
a) relating the rhetoric of intermediality to the specific personal,
cultural, historical, ideological contexts, ideas and artistic paradigms
in which they occur;
b) the poetics and politics of intermediality in the cinema of Eastern
and Central Europe.
Confirmed keynote speakers:
¢ Brigitte Peucker (Yale University, USA), author of Incorporating
Images: Film and the Rival Arts (1995), The Material Image: Art and the
Real in Film (2007), currently working on a book titled Aesthetic
Spaces: The Place of Art in Film.
¢ Eivind Røssaak (National Library of Norway), author of The
Still/Moving Image: Cinema and the Arts (2010), and editor of the volume
Between Stillness and Motion(2011).
We invite both proposals for individual papers and pre-constituted
panels. Panels may consist of 3 or 4 speakers. The time for
presentations is limited to maximum 20 minutes, followed by a 10 minute
debate.
Deadline for the submission of proposals: June 30, 2014.
We will notify you about the acceptance of your proposal by: July 7, 2014.
Submission of proposals: please download the submission form from our
website, complete and send it as an attachment to the following
address:(2014.intermedia.figurations /at/ gmail.com).
Conference website:
http://film.sapientia.ro/en/conferences/xv-film-and-media-studies-conference-intransylvania
................................
Dr. ÁGNES PETHO, Head of Department
Sapientia University, Cluj-Napoca, Romania
Department of Film, Photography, and Media,
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