[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[Commlist] CFP 26th SERCIA Conference: Cosmopolitan Aspirations in English-Speaking Cinema and Television
Thu Dec 05 09:18:56 GMT 2019
CALL FOR PAPERS
*Cosmopolitan Aspirations in English-Speaking Cinema and Television*
26^th Annual SERCIA Conference
Universidad de Zaragoza, Spain
September 2-4, 2020
It has become almost mandatory to start any piece on cosmopolitanism
with a reference to Diogenes the Cynic (412-323 BC) and his famous claim
“I am a citizen of the world”. Alluring as the phrase may sound to our
21st century ears, when uttered by Diogenes, it was an invitation to be
a social outsider: the allegiance to humanity as a whole implied
becoming an exile from the comforts of one’s place of birth and social
group (Nussbaum 1994). Two thousand years later, Immanuel Kant
considered that the achievement of a cosmopolitan order was a must “if
the human race was not to consume itself in wars between nations and if
the power of nation-states was not to overwhelm the freedom of
individual” (Fine and Cohen 2002). Kant’s ideals about a cosmopolitan
world order, cosmopolitan law and cosmopolitan hospitality became the
foundation on which moral cosmopolitanism, understood as a philosophical
and political project aimed at the creation of cosmopolitan political
institutions and the development of a cosmopolitan civil society,
started to be theorised. This cosmopolitan tradition became especially
appealing in the 1990s, a decade that witnessed the fall of the Berlin
Wall and the end of apartheid, among other epochal changes, as well as
the widespread use of the Internet and the emergence of the so-called
network society. Cosmopolitanism became then a framework (or a
“methodology” in Ulrich Beck’s words) to try to understand and deal with
some of the challenges of globalization: the increased mobilities of
people and goods, the proliferation of global risks, the redefinition of
borders and the proliferation of global media and virtual communities,
among others (Beck 2000).
The development of cinema in the late nineteenth century fed into
cosmopolitan aspirations of modern city life and an increasing desire
for travel. Films crossed national borders and opened up spaces for
spectators’ mediated engagement with difference. The history of cinema
abounds in examples of filmmakers that abandoned national contexts as
their immediate frame of reference and created their work from and for a
cosmopolitan imagination. Orson Welles, Jules Dassin, Ernst Lubitsch,
Fritz Lang, Max Ophüls and, more recently, Michael Haneke, Alejandro
González Iñárritu, Alfonso Cuarón and Yorgos Lanthimos immediately come
to mind, but the list of travelling filmmakers, past and present, is
much longer, and it includes names much more closely associated with a
particular national or local identity, from Jean Renoir to Wong Kar-wai
– not to mention, of course, travelling actors contributing to foster
cosmopolitan aspirations, from Maurice Chevalier to Marion Cotillard and
Charlotte Gainsbourg, from Louise Brooks to Marlene Dietrich, from Jean
Seberg to Kristen Stewart, from Ingrid Bergman to Max von Sydow, from
Jackie Chan to Maggie Cheung, from Dolores del Río to Penélope Cruz,
from Sophia Loren to, yes, Clint Eastwood. The development of
communication technologies since the 1980s has also led to the
development of “globally dispersed productions.” Filmmakers, actors and
technicians from all over the world form networks of international
professionals collaborating beyond national differences. The outcome of
these constant border-crossings have been innumerable films that have
complicated national identities and showcased hybridity, and have
explored the dynamic between the familiar and the stranger in a myriad
ways. Similarly, from its inception, television brought other cultures
and ways of seeing the world into the domestic space of one’s home.
Digital television and multimedia platforms can now create cosmopolitan
communities on demand. Audiovisual media have always played and are
still playing a crucial role in the process that Beck refers to as the
“cosmopolitanization” of the world. Yet, when compared to the existing
literature on the issue in other areas, cosmopolitanism still remains a
largely underexplored subject in film and television studies.
This conference will explore the ways in which cosmopolitan aspirations
(and their enemies” in Ulrich Beck’s words) have made their way into
English-speaking cinema and television across different time periods,
nations, genres and media. Areas to be explored include but are not
limited to:
* onscreen representations and constructions of cosmopolitan
identities
* the places of the cosmopolitan: borders, borderlands and global
cities
* the risk society: eco-cosmopolitanism
* agents of cosmopolitanism onscreen: frequent travellers,
tourists, migrants and refugees
* cosmopolitanism and gender
* cosmopolitan performances, performing cosmopolitanism
* intimate encounters in a global context
* visual and narrative articulations of the cosmopolitan
* cosmopolitanism in film and television genres
* cosmopolitan directors and stars. Celebrity cosmopolitanism
* the limits and contradictions of onscreen cosmopolitanism
* co-productions as cosmopolitan, global and/or transnational
production strategies
* cinematic and televisual representations of the global society
* cosmopolitan film and television networks
* globally-dispersed productions. Global industry, local labour
* cosmopolitan communities and multimedia digital platforms
* film and TV reception around the world: local, global and/or
cosmopolitan audiences
* cosmopolitanism and multilingual films, the politics of dubbing,
subtitling and double versions
*Keynote Speakers:*
Juan Suárez (Universidad de Murcia)
Deborah Shaw (University of Portsmouth)
*Submission:*
Please submit a 300-500 word abstract and short bio (120 words) in
English by *March 17**^th **, 2020 *to the conference website:
http://eventos.unizar.es/43243/upload/cosmopolitan-aspirations-in-englishspeaking-cinema-and-television.html
Dr. María del Mar Azcona Montoliu
Dr. Julia Echeverría Domingo
Dr. Pablo Gómez Muñoz
Universidad de Zaragoza
---------------
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]