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[ecrea] 9th NECS Workshop - forging: authenticity in the making
Mon Jan 06 12:35:02 GMT 2014
FORGING: AUTHENTICITY IN THE MAKING
Leiden, Netherlands, 14.-15. March 2014
9th NECS Graduate Workshop
Hosted by Leiden University and Leiden International Short Film Experience
Call for Papers (deadline: February 7th, 2014)
Forgery is the consciously deceiving replication of a product or a
manner of production. Depending on its object, its counterpart could be
authenticity, originality, integrity, and/or truthfulness. The latter
are widespread values which tend to determine the judgement passed on
products and producers, as well as rule considerations about groups and
peoples who contextualise them and consume them. This matrix of
assessment is not without complications, all the more when it comes to
cultural products because they acquire worth on many levels
simultaneously (aesthetic, ethic, political, technical, theological,
teleological, etc). In addition to that, the ease to reproduce, emulate
and replicate, provided by professional devices and lay customer
gadgets, makes cultural evaluation of forging even more intricate. This
workshop aims to dwell on the matter as regards audiovisual artefacts,
with an emphasis on cinema. On which grounds should we praise or condemn
forged movies/videos, their makers and their audiences? Is the matrix of
values above actually tenable? Can individual and collective identities
subsist within / exist without some forging? We invite papers that
address the workshop theme from different stances, including (not
limited to) the following:
Forging the maker
Authentic artists, authentic filmmakers: self-expression and integrity,
commoditisation and entertainment, symbolic ambitions and practical
needs. Posers or die-hards.
Filmmakers as theorists on artistic forging, e.g. Banksy’s Exit Through
the Gift Shop, Orson Welles’ F for Fake. Taking a stance through
audiovisual discourse.
‘Replica’ construction: forging aesthetics vs. aesthetics of forging;
imitation vs. originality; copycat mimesis vs. creative sampling. Can
modernist or postmodernist perspectives help us figure out replication?
Forging the audience
Politics of forging: fictitious audiences, concepts of ‘nationalism’,
‘folk’, ‘tradition’, and (geo-localised) ‘style’. Is the burden of
history a product of forging?
Concoction of online/offline personae. Filmmaking audiences and
self-forging. Handheld technologies of forging in times of social media
preponderance.
Forging cultural conglomerates and collective identities. Prescription
of normative frameworks –questions of gender, ethnicity and creed.
Post-colonial and critical theories on media culture. Hegemonic world
pictures and alternative (cyber) spaces.
Forging the product
Make believe to un-believe: how do we know if something is fake? From
false emotion in a performance through to digital clones and SFX.
The actual value of forged works: artistic, aesthetic, monetary,
symbolic. Multi-level judgement of cinematic works. Conflated grounds of
assessment.
Ethical perspectives on forgery. Moral philosophy and law. Legal
frameworks, liability, intellectual property, copyright. Boundaries and
blind spots.
Mockumentaries, documentaries, news, and lies: unreliable sources about
the past and the present. Concealed dissociations between reality and
the moving image. Reality, hyper-reality, and unreality.
Submissions deadline: February 7th, 2014
Please address abstracts (300-500 words) along with institutional
affiliation and brief biographical note to: (graduates /at/ necs.org)
Notification will follow shortly thereafter.
The conference language is English.
Participants will need to cover their own travel and accommodation
expenses. Travel information as well as a list of affordable hotels and
other accommodation will be provided in January.
Conference attendance is free, but valid NECS-membership is required to
participate.
Participants must register with NECS at www.necs.org and pay their fee
by February 1st. For the terms of NECS membership, please also refer to
our website.
Organization:
Carlos Miguel Roos (Leiden University/Ghent University), Chris de
Selincourt (University of the Arts, London), Gavin Wilson (York St John
University)
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