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[ecrea] Call for Papers - Photogénie Issue 2
Wed Feb 05 23:35:26 GMT 2014
We are pleased to announce the second open call for papers for
Photogénie (www.photogenie.be <http://www.photogenie.be>) - the deadline
for proposals is March 16, 2014. Selected contributions are due April
30, 2014. Submissions (as Microsoft Word e-mail attachments) and
questions should be directed to (editor /at/ photogenie.be)
<mailto:(editor /at/ photogenie.be)>. We look forward to receiving your
contributions!
Given the scope of inquiry opened up by our first call for papers on a
'New Realist Cinema,' we've decided to focus the second issue of
Photogénie on the related issue of 'everydayness.' An ever-growing field
of study in cultural studies and cultural theory, everydayness is also
still a governing aesthetic principle behind much of what is most
exciting in contemporary art cinema: be it in political cinemas
incorporating the precepts of new historiographies, like the French
'Annals' school, tracing collective perception through anecdotal
accounts of everyday life; in slow or 'contemplative' cinemas enacting
temporality and harking back to modernist or avant-gardist experiments
with duration; in contemporary instances of surrealist cinema,
discovering the marvelous and absurd in the everyday; in mumblecore
anti-narratives hinging on aimless conversation; in the recent interest,
both artistic and academic, in home movies and amateur filmmaking; or in
observational, ethnographic or personal documentaries that start from
lived experience. We are less interested in reiterating the cultural and
social readings of everydayness inspired by Henri Lefebvre, Michel de
Certeau, or, against the setting of modernity, Siegfried Kracauer and
Walter Benjamin, than in highlighting the aesthetic choices or
particularities, dare we say it, the routines of filmmakers working
within the idiom of the everyday, in their ways of staging undramatic or
non-events, repeated actions and general absence of classical narrative
progression (resulting in delays, retardations and open endings). The
cinematic language these filmmakers develop is often based on a
self-imposed restriction or restraint: restriction of setting, camera
movement, of the available technologies of shooting and processing,
restraint in performance, dramaturgy and scoring. What appears instead
is a heightening of specific expressive elements, like rhythm and tempo
(of speech, movement, cutting), mise en scène (attention to particular
objects), narration, framing and composition, or, at a more theoretical
level, the exploration of stillness, contemplation and presence as both
mediated and unmediated category. We welcome papers on all these topics
and specifically encourage contributions on minimalism in new Asian and
European cinemas; boredom, slowness and radical running times;
ethnographic cinemas; the archeology of social change; filmed
conversations; and on filmmakers like Wang Bing, Ben Rivers, Hong
Sang-soo, Pedro Costa, Lav Diaz, Lisandro Alonso, Apichatpong
Weerasethakul, Albert Serra, Jia Zhang-ke, Corneliu Porumboiu, Richard
Linklater and Andrew Bujalski.
Sincerely,
Bart Versteirt / VDFC vzw
02/ 551.19.61 (VOX) / 02/ 551.19.55 (FAX) / 0474/ 38.87.80 (MOBILE)
www.vdfc.be <http://www.vdfc.be/>
HOTEL VAN CLEVE-RAVENSTEIN / Ravensteinstraat 3 / B-1000 Brussel / Belgium
vzw Vlaamse Dienst voor Filmcultuur / company registration number BE
0452067708
bank account number FORTIS 210-0079616-31 / BIC GEBABEBB / IBAN BE
04 2100 0796 1631
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