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[ecrea] CFP: Cars and screens: cinematic automobilities. A special issue of Film Studies
Thu Oct 04 08:24:12 GMT 2018
*CALL FOR PAPERS*
*Cars and screens: cinematic automobilities*
A special issue of /Film Studies/
Co-edited by Elizabeth Parke and Will Straw
Scholarship on the relationship of film to “automobility” has traced the
historical and technological interweaving of film and cars. Much of this
work has focused on American cultural inflections of these two
technologies, from the genre of the road movie through those films
documenting southern California hot rod subcultures. In the years since
volumes like /Autopia/(Peter Wollen and Joe Kerr, 2002), /Crash/(Karen
Beckman, 2010), and /Zoomscape /(Mitchell Schwarzer, 2004) explored
analogies between automobility and the experience of cinema, the growth
of in-car display screens, dash scams and other technologies has
rendered that relationship more complex. So, too, has the use of
personal screens in automobiles, the rise of driver-less and
rider-sharing automobiles and a growing tendency to view the automobile
as a challenge to doctrines of the pedestrian city. Elsewhere, in chic
European films like /Un homme et une femme/(1966) or the opening
sequence of /The Italian Job/(1969) the elegance of the modern
automobile and picturesque character of European landscapes have fueled
exercises of stylistic cinematic bravura. Cinema and cars (and their
attendant infrastructures, e.g., roads, bridges, gas stations, parking
lots) have shaped our built urban environments, forming a symbiotic
dyad, with the history of each marked by innovations that influence the
other, leaping back and forth from screen to road. Both cars and films
have changed our relationship to visuality, inflecting the ways we
perceive the world, move through space and time, and in turn, experience
(or expect to experience) distance and duration.
This special issue of /Film Studies/seeks to expand on the existing
scholarship on film and automobility. We invite articles that explore,
in a theoretical sense, the historical relationship of the automobile to
cinema. We hope, as well, to expand the geographical and temporal frame
through which this relationship might be understood, with articles
exploring cinematic automobility from transnational perspectives or in
non-Western contexts and proposals that consider this phenomenon in
relation to a variety of audiovisual formats and vehicle types. Topics,
for a 6000-8000 word essay to be delivered by 1 February 2019, may
include (but are not limited to):
- business relationships between cars and film (e.g., studios’ ownership
of car parks and petrol stations)
- car company industrial films and investments in filmmaking
- car-film aesthetic challenges and solutions (e.g., shooting in moving
cars; auto-mobile production techniques)
- ‘smaller screen realities’ which form part of the automobile
experience: e.g., the small mobile screens of smartphones, built-in car
interfaces, backup cameras, and dashcams
- case studies of car-film relationships that involve specific vehicle
types (e.g., passenger cars, specific car models/brands, buses, taxis,
motorcycles, mopeds, ride-sharing vehicles or autonomous cars)
- case studies of specific films, genre formats or cycles that hinge on
motor vehicles
The editors will be contributing an introduction essay to the special
issue outlining the major themes and research questions brought to light
by the contributors.
Please send abstracts (250-300 words) by 15 November 2018 to Elizabeth
Parke (elizabeth.parke /at/ utoronto.ca) <mailto:(elizabeth.parke /at/ utoronto.ca)>
and Will Straw (william.straw /at/ mcgill.ca)
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