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[ecrea] CFP: Working the Film Script
Mon Nov 26 21:18:13 GMT 2018
*Call for Papers*
*Working the Film Script: Hidden Production Histories *
*A Symposium at the Bill Douglas Cinema Museum, University of Exeter*
*Saturday 23^rd March 2019
Keynote Speaker: Dr Melanie Williams (UEA)*
A symposium to illuminate the otherwise hidden labour of individuals who
work on/with film scripts, including screenwriters, continuity/script
supervisors, script editors, text advisors/researchers, (sub)titlers,
translators, authors of source texts (and their representatives),
legislators, censors and other production roles. The symposium
also invites prospective delegates to explore research on the production
of screenplays, treatments, shooting scripts, subtitles, fan fiction,
promotional synopses and other written ‘versions’ which may serve
diverse cultural ends.
Film studies has increasingly relied upon collaborative models of
authorship, but not necessarily at the expense of downplaying individual
contributions. Recent production studies and feminist film
historiographies strategically distinguish the work of academically
marginalised agents from within their respective networks. Speakers are
invited to debate case studies which demonstrate how the script (broadly
understood) has been worked by underappreciated individuals, and their
efforts to share or silo time, energy and expertise within hierarchical
or communal production scenarios.
Overall, the symposium aims to evidence the act of scripting film
narrative and style in historical production contexts, using
wide-ranging examples of specialist labour: plotting shots, managing
continuity, adapting films from/to literature, the iterative process of
screenwriting, and so on. A second aim will be to provide pragmatic
production histories that showcase novel methodological and/or archival
resources, in keeping with the choice of venue:*The Bill Douglas Cinema
Museum*. Among the Museum’s 75,000+ itemsare published and unpublished
screenplays, novelisations of popular films (including the ‘Reader’s
Library’ series), source texts, various filmmaking manuals, programmes
and press books containing plot summaries, and relevant individual
collections including those of Gavrik Losey (film producer), Pamela
Davies (continuity supervisor), and the filmmaker Bill
Douglas.*A**sample of items which thematically complement the symposium
will be available for delegates to browse on the day.*
If you would like to present a paper, please email a 250 word abstract
and 100 word bio (toscriptwork /at/ exeter.ac.uk)
<mailto:(scriptwork /at/ exeter.ac.uk)>by*23rd January 2019.*Preference will be
given to papers which respond to one or more of the following provocations:
1) What academically marginalised production roles are illuminated by
researching script work in film, broadly understood?
2) How does scripting intersect with gender, class, racial and political
identity?
3) How is script work influenced by transnational workflows, from
subtitling dialogue for international audiences to exporting literary
‘properties’?
4) What methodological, archival and technological resources are
available to researchers of script work in film?
Enquiries addressed (toscriptwork /at/ exeter.ac.uk)
<mailto:(scriptwork /at/ exeter.ac.uk)>**will be checked by Steven Roberts (PhD
Student and Museum Intern). The symposium is being coordinated by Steven
during a six-month placement at the Bill Douglas Cinema Museum (where he
is cataloguing the Pamela Davies collection), with organizational
assistance from University of Exeter colleagues.
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