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[Commlist] CFP – Histories of Microanalysis at the Intersection of Film, Science and Art
Tue Oct 29 17:14:24 GMT 2019
CFP
The Movement Movement: Histories of Microanalysis at the Intersection of
Film, Science and Art
Philipps-University Marburg, Germany June 4–6, 2020
The desire to study the motion of humans and other animals is deeply
embedded in the technological, social and aesthetic histories of film.
For a long time, the focus was on individual behavior and individual
actors. This changed in the 1950s and 1960s when anthropologists,
psychologists, linguists, sociologists and ethologists increasingly
turned to film to analyze movement as an element in systems of social
interaction. Informed by cybernetics, systems theory and structural
linguistics, researchers such as Ray L. Birdwhistell, Gregory Bateson,
Nikolaas Tinbergen and Adam Kendon looked for patterns in what they
regarded as the continuous, multi-sensorial stream of
interaction/communication behavior. Film and later video became
important tools to tap into this stream, to stabilize it and facilitate
close attention to minute details through repeated viewings of brief
stretches of interaction. Bringing to consciousness “visible, yet
unseen” phenomena that sometimes lasted for only fractions of a second,
film promised to open a window onto the microtemporalities and
processuality of social systems. But such analysis also reflected back
on the (micro-)temporalities of film itself. This point was not lost on
experimental filmmakers like Hollis Frampton, who drew on studies of
movement interaction in his theoretical and aesthetic reflections on
film. The field of interaction studies also overlapped with developments
in contemporary dance and performance art, drawing choreographers like
Irmgard Bartenieff and Forrestine Paulay into the circles of
communication research, while also influencing aesthetic approaches to
dance and performance.
This conference aims at exploring these often overlooked intersections
of social science, ethology, experimental film and the performing arts
in the 1960s and 1970s across the disciplines of film and media studies,
history of science, visual anthropology and art history. It addresses
questions of science policy during the Cold War in the East and West,
epistemologies of the moving image, scales of observation, and
interrelations between analytical and aesthetic procedures. It also
addresses the question of how film was integrated, in various ways, into
wider media assemblages/environments, including notational systems,
viewing equipment, diagrams, and artistic performances. Considering the
entanglements of cinematic movement, movement interaction research and
artistic practices, the conference seeks to open an historical
perspective on recent debates on media change and the relocation of film.
The conference is part of the DFG research project “Transdisciplinary
Networks of Media Knowledge” at Philipps-Universität Marburg.
Possible topics might include:
- cinematic movement research and changing science policies in the
1960s and 1970s
- case studies/histories of filmic interaction research
- visual anthropologies of movement and gesture
- psychiatric and diagnostic uses of film and video
- media assemblages of movement studies
- microtemporalities in theories and philosophies of film
- intersections between microanalysis and experimental film
- the role of modern dance and dance notations for research on movement
interaction
- research film archives and archives of experimental film
Proposals should be submitted to (henning.engelke /at/ uni-marburg.de) by
November 15, 2019. Please include a 250 - 500 word abstract and a
current CV. Applicants will be notified of acceptance by November 30.
The conference will take place at Philipps-University Marburg, Germany,
on June 4–6, 2020.
Conference organizers:
Henning Engelke and Sophia Graefe, DFG-Heisenberg-Project
“Transdisciplinary Networks of Media Knowledge”, Institute of Media
Studies, Philipps-University Marburg
Link:
https://www.uni-marburg.de/de/fb09/medienwissenschaft/pdfs/cfp_movement_movement_2020.pdf
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