[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[Commlist] Call for submissions for special issue of Northern Lights: ‘Europe at the crossroads: Cinematic takes’.
Tue Jan 15 16:56:28 GMT 2019
Call for Papers for a Special Issue of Northern Lights: Film and Media
Studies Yearbook
Click here for more information >>
https://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/MediaManager/File/NL/Northern%20Lights%20(CFP)Europe%20at%20the%20Crossroads-%20Cinematic%20Takes.pdf
Guest editor: Temenuga Trifonova, Associate Professor of Cinema and
Media Studies, York University, Toronto
Europe at the Crossroads: Cinematic Takes The history of the idea of
‘European identity’ can be described in terms of, on one hand, a
constant oscillation between two poles, one instrumental or pragmatic
(the Europe of norms), the other affective (the Europe of values and
feelings) and, on the other hand, in terms of a continuous, unresolved
conflict between the belief in some ineffable European ‘spirit’ or
‘ethos’ and the outright rejection of any sort of ‘European identity’.
Indeed, a recurring theme in all critical writings on Europe and
European identity is the idea that to be European is to doubt that there
is something like a ‘European identity’. To illuminate the ambiguity
pervading attempts to define European identity one need only juxtapose
the traditional characteristics of Europeanness deriving from the
continent’s founding philosophical and religious traditions, including
Christianity, Roman law and the Enlightenment – here ‘Europeanness’ is
defined in relation to the concepts of the polis, citizenship, democracy
and participation, rationalism, universality and cosmopolitanism – with
the immense contradictions underlying the concept of Europeanness
defined in relation to political and economic circumstances.
Over the last couple of decades, Europe has seen a trend of populist
right-wing parties riding on the wave of multicultural backlash across
Europe, gaining widespread support with xenophobic nationalist-populist
slogans purporting to save ethno-nationalist culture from the threat of
immigrants. The Brexit referendum, following a prolonged political
campaign of heightened anxiety over border control, was simply the most
dramatic expression of the crisis of democracy Europe is facing. The
sweeping territorial recalibration following the establishment of the EU
has led many scholars to declare the emergence of a post-national
European identity and citizenship based on mobility and universal human
rights rather than on the rights of persons as members of nationstates.
In Tracking Europe: Mobility, Diaspora, and the Politics of Location
(2010) Ginette Verstraette claims that the notion of ‘imagined mobility’
has become more essential to the notion of European identity than
Benedict Anderson’s influential idea of ‘imagined community’, which is
still territorial in nature. However, while it might seem that we have
entered a post-national age marked by identities that are provisional,
fluid, incoherent and ephemeral, the nation state has not lost any of
its relevance or authority: regardless of the supposed dissolution of
borders under globalization, modern citizenship still embeds identity
and legal rights in the territorial nation-state.
The purpose of this special issue of Northern Lights: Film and Media
Studies Yearbook is to reflect on contemporary debates around the
concepts of ‘Europe’ and ‘European identity’ through an examination of
European films from 2000 to the present dealing with various aspects of
globalization (the refugee crisis, labour migration, the resurgence of
nationalism and ethnic violence, neoliberalism, transnational
commodification, post-colonialism, transnational capital etc.) with a
particular attention to the ambiguities and contradictory aspects of the
figure of the migrant and the ways in which this figure challenges us to
rethink European identity and its core Enlightenment values
(citizenship, justice, ethics, liberty, tolerance, and hospitality).
Migrants and refugees have become, in Rey Chow’s words, ‘the new
“primitives” of Europe’. On the other hand, however, the migrant/refugee
has also been celebrated as a 1) symbol of ‘nomadic excess’; 2) the
‘structural excess’ constitutive of law and morality; 3) a utopian
figure representing a model for rethinking the idea of ‘Europe’ and of
‘European identity’.
Please send a 300-word proposal and a short bio to the editor, Temenuga
Trifonova, at (temenuga /at/ yorku.ca) <mailto:(temenuga /at/ yorku.ca)> by 15
February 2019. Final papers will be due 15 August 2019.
---------------
The COMMLIST
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier. Please use it responsibly and wisely.
--
To subscribe or unsubscribe, please visit http://commlist.org/
--
Before sending a posting request, please always read the guidelines at http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
URL: http://nicocarpentier.net
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]