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[Commlist] CFP “Italian Film, Costume Design and Fashion from the Silent Era to the Present” JICMS
Thu Jan 24 13:54:04 GMT 2019
*Call for papers for a Special Issue of the Journal of Italian Cinema
and Media Studies, on “Italian Film, Costume Design and Fashion from the
Silent Era to the Present” to be edited by Eugenia Paulicelli and
Giuliana Muscio.*
**
*Italian Film/Costume Design/Fashion from the Silent Era to the Present. *
**
Fashion and film share a highly interactive quality. As two of the most
popular and widespread commercial industries to grow out of modernity,
cinema and fashion have always had a synergetic relationship, both using
the technology of the camera and that of the body and performance.
Costume is integral both to the actor’s performance and to the cinematic
rendition of visual narratives and experience. Since the birth of cinema
in the late nineteenth century, the film scene has constituted a virtual
shopping window for clothes, exhibiting and making desirable the newest
fashions and goods available at the department stores. Film costume has
not only borrowed from fashion and haute couture; it has also inspired
the production of the newest fashions. Costumes in cinema have also been
used as narrative tools for telling stories on screen that emphasize
character identity and development while also attracting a larger
audience. More recently, the digital genre of “fashion film” has become
a widespread advertising and storytelling tool for fashion luxury brands
as Ferragamo, Prada, Louis Vuitton, Dior amongst the others.
Although fashion and film costume have always been vital
to the totality of the cinema industry, they did not attract academic
attention until the 1990s. That is not to say that the topic was
completely neglected, however, as one of the first books on the
relationship between fashion and cinema, /La moda e il costume nel
film/, was published in 1950 in Italy, edited by the university
professor and critic Mario Verdone, father of actor Carlo Verdone. The
book contains a homage to the costume designer Gino Carlo Sensani, who
was praised by Antonioni. Costume design only began to be recognized as
a profession in the world of Italian cinema in the 1930s, but
costume/cinema and fashion were soon to establish a close link with the
global launch of Italian fashion in the post-war years.
In the United States, film scholars Jane Gaines and
Charlotte Herzog edited their landmark collection /Fabrications/in 1990,
and in 1996 and 1997, UK-based film scholars Pam Cook and Stella Bruzzi
published monographs on fashion in British cinema (Cook: 1996) and on
film, gender, and identity (Bruzzi: 1997). These seminal books offered a
reflection on methodology and histories (of gender and nation), and
paved the way for new interpretations of film, body and performance,
masculinities, fashion, popular culture, and stardom and, at the same
time, challenged age-old hierarchies in the humanities.
The intersection between fashion and film and the growing
scholarship dedicated to it are now becoming a very fertile terrain.
More attention is now being dedicated to the role of costume and costume
design in cinema and its interrelation with fashion, Italian style and
the made in Italy. Nevertheless, the combined study of fashion and film
and the particular focus on Italy is still at an early stage of
development within film studies and especially Italian cinema and media
studies.
We invite scholars, costume and fashion designers, archivists, museum
scholars and experts to participate in a special issue of the journal
focusing on film/fashion/costume design with the aim of mapping the
intermedial and transnational history of Italian film/costume
design/fashion and screen media from the silent era until the present.
All film genres are of interest.
Topics to be considered include but are not limited to are:
Silent cinema and costume
Italy and Hollywood
Hollywood in Italy
Italian actors in Hollywood
Transnational impact of cinema-mediated fashion
Italian costume designers in Hollywood and elsewhere
Fashion Houses, sartorie and archives in Italy
Film and photographic archives in Italy and elsewhere
Cities of film and cities of fashion
Branding and film/fashion/costume
Fashion film in historical perspectives
International stars in Italy
Well known and less known costume designers
The role of craftsmanship in costume and fashion
Costume drama
Women directors and the work of women whose work has been neglected
Film/Costume/Fashion and pedagogy, interdisciplinary courses; designing
curriculum
Each abstract should include the following information:
a) a clear title
b) a 500-word description outlining:
- the topic
- the critical approach of the proposed article—whether theoretical or
historical
- a cohesive description of the proposed article’s argument and objective
- relevant bibliography and filmography
In addition to a 500-word abstract, authors should send to the guest
editors a 150-word biographical note, followed by a detailed list of
their academic publications, and commitment that, if the proposal is
accepted, the article will be submitted within 8 weeks from the official
invitation to submit the article.
Please send your proposal with a Bio by *February 28, 2019*to the editors:
Prof. Eugenia Paulicelli, Queens College and The Graduate Center, The
City University of New York, email address:
(Eugenia.paulicelli /at/ qc.cuny.edu); and Prof. Giuliana Muscio, University of
Padua, Emerita, email address: (giulianamuscio /at/ gmail.com)
*The accepted proposals will be notified by March 15^th 2019; completed
essays should be sent by May 30^th , 2019 for peer review; authors will
be notified of the results of the peer-review by June 30^th 2019.*
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