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[ecrea] CfP: Ubiquitous Cinema
Wed Nov 09 13:10:56 GMT 2016
*Ubiquitous Cinema - Education, Mobility, and Storytelling in the
Digital Age*
Call for Papers
*Beijing, Beijing Film Academy, April 27-29, 2017*
Beijing Film Academy, China Film Education Research Centre, in
cooperation with the Amsterdam Centre for Globalisation Studies (ACGS),
University of Amsterdam
Convenors: Liu Jun, Jeroen de Kloet, Xu Hang, Rowan Parry
*Keynote speakers*:
*Chris Berry *(King’s College London, co-author of /China on Screen:
Cinema and Nation/, editor of /Chinese Films in Focus, /and co-editor of
/Public Space, Media Space/ and /Cultural Studies and Cultural
Industries in Northeast Asia/)
*Yomi Braester*(University of Washington, author of /Painting the City
Red: Chinese Cinema and the Urban Contract /and /Witness against
History: Literature, Film and Public Discourse in Twentieth-Century China/)
*Song Hwee Lim*(The Chinese University of Hong Kong, author of /Tsai
Ming-liang and a Cinema of Slowness/ and /Celluloid Comrades:
Representations of Male Homosexuality in Contemporary Chinese Cinemas/)
*Patricia Pisters*(University of Amsterdam, author of /The Neuro-Image:
A Deleuzian Filmphilosophy of Digital Screen Culture/ and /The Matrix of
Visual Culture: Working with Deleuze in Film Theory/)
Cameras and screens have become ubiquitous in everyday life. This
provokes questions about the ways we produce, perceive, distribute, but
also teach and study cinema today. For this conference, we aim to
discuss three entangled phenomena to probe into the ubiquity of screen
cultures in the digital age: education, mobility, and storytelling.
First, *education*. Phones are used to shoot anything from cat videos to
entire feature films, which we share and watch on /Vimeo/ or /Tudou/.
Increasingly, documentaries and short movies are made by what used to be
called “amateurs.” What role does formal film education have then, when
shooting and editing have become seemingly easy? How to educate the
young in a time in which the visual and the digital reign? What are the
problematics, if not dangers, of becoming visible (cf. Rey Chow)?
Second, *mobility*. Digitization allows for almost immediate mobility of
images, but in its slipstream are also technologies, money and ideas
(cf. Appadurai). Where do we stand twenty years after the rise of
transnational cinema studies? How do film festivals facilitate the
global circulation of film? When all that seemed solid becomes unstable
and is on the move, what happens not only to scholarship, but also to
our lived experiences of cinema? And how does it provoke a desire to
stay put and be slow?
Third, *storytelling*. How has increased mobility provoked
cross-fertilization amongst forms, genres, national cinemas, and their
storytelling conventions? How is the Internet used as a platform to
experiment with form, content and technology to tell the stories of our
digital age? How does the emergence of virtual and augmented realities
affect the ways in which films are made and perceived? How do new visual
regimes emerge and alter the language of cinema? What are the
theoretical and political implications of these transformations, and do
they provoke a redistribution of the sensible (cf. Rancière)? How is the
movement-image, with its focus on plot, and the time-image, with its
focus on point of view, supplemented by the neuro-image, in which we
experience the mental landscapes of characters (cf. Deleuze and Pisters)?
This conference brings together scholars from various disciplines to
reflect on these questions related to film education, mobility, and
cinematic storytelling in the digital age. We invite both paper and
panel submissions that engage with (one of) the themes of this
conference through specific case studies.
Possible topics among the three leading themes include (but are not
limited to):
*Education*
Children and cinema
The role of film schools and formal education
Changing curricula in times of globalisation
Teaching creativity
Digital tools and methods in film education
The role of the amateur filmmaker
*Mobility*
Cinema of stasis and slowness
Mobility in cinema: cars, planes, trains, subways
Globalisation and the moving image
Transnational film production
Mobile cinemas and pop-up screenings
Film festivals
*Storytelling*
Cross-fertilization and hybridity in storytelling modes
Technology and storytelling
Digitization and film aesthetics
Virtual and augmented realities and cinema
The rise of the neuro-image
Regimes or distributions of the visible
Changing modes of film reception
Please submit an abstract (200-300 words) and short bio (max. 100 words)
by *1 December* 2016 to Vincent So: (v.h.so /at/ uva.nl)
<mailto:(v.h.so /at/ uva.nl)>. For panels, please submit a general panel
description of 200-300 words, four abstracts (200-300 words each) and
biographies (max. 100 words each).
Language: English
Notice of acceptance will be given by 1 January 2017.
While there is no conferenceregistrationfee, neither transport nor
accommodation can be covered by the organiser.
This conference is part of the project ChinaCreative, funded by a
consolidator grant of the European Research Council (ERC-2013-CoG
616882-ChinaCreative).
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