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[Commlist] Cinema 12 cfp: images of the real. philosophy and documentary film
Tue Feb 11 21:02:14 GMT 2020
*/CINEMA /12//CFP: /IMAGES OF THE REAL./ PHILOSOPHY AND DOCUMENTARY
FILM*____
*Guest Editors*
Stefanie Baumann
Susana Nascimento Duarte ____
*Managing Editor*
Patrícia Castello Branco ____
/Cinema: Journal of Philosophy and the Moving Image/ welcomes
submissions to its 12^th issue on */Images of the Real/*/: *Philosophy
and Documentary Film*/*.*____
Documentary films constitute a challenge for philosophical thinking.
Relying on reality and addressing it explicitly as well, they raise the
problem of the encounter between world and images. The indexical images
they feature do not merely reproduce the real in its immediacy, but also
constitute, in themselves, a particular relation to it. Rather than a
pure objective material, they are always a product of a dialogue between
the visible and its perception, the historically developed reality and
the meanings ascribed to it. Being at the same time reproductions of the
empirical world and artistic configurations, documentaries appeal for
critical reflection rather than blind belief. However, many commercial
productions, educational formats, or journalistic reportages tend to
conceal these intricate connections and claim to represent the factual
world in an accurate way through rather conventional forms. By
uncritically using strategies such as seemingly neutral voiceovers,
interviews with experts or victims, live footage or archival images
contextualized in a coherent, unilateral way, they obscure the fact that
the topical issues have not only been mediated through framing, editing,
and sound, but also through the filmmaker’s stance towards her subject. ____
By contrast, examples of the critical awareness of the complex relation
between filmic images and the reality they address can be found in the
work of independent**filmmakers and theorists. Trinh T Min-Ha, for
instance, not only problematizes the confusion of the notion of truth
with that of meaning along with the authoritarian attitude of
traditional ethnographic film, but she also develops a particular
“method” (“speaking near-by”) for her own films. Werner Herzog opposes
to what he calls the “truth of accountants” his own notion of “ecstatic
truth”, which intertwines understanding and experience, and thus needs
to be fabricated rather than recorded. Hartmut Bitomsky considers that
making an image always means to extract it from an original context, and
uses the notion of “ready-made” when he speaks of his own images as
quotations of reality. Jean Rouch advances the idea of /ciné-transe/ as
a means to penetrate into deeper strata of the real by partaking in the
action, and recently, Pooja Rangan points to the authoritarian attitude
concealed under the label of humanitarianism in many documentaries. In a
similar vein, many artistic documentaries, as we came to call them, and
essay films by committed filmmakers implicitly criticize the existing
power structures and rhetoric in which assertions about objectivity
operate. Through aesthetic means they problematize standardized
perception and deflect the focus in order to allow for a critique of
images and common sensical norms. These can be as various as
distanciation, separation between sound and image, slow motion (Wang
Bing, S. Loznitsa), meta-cinematic gestures disrupting the film’s
indexical connection to the real (J-L. Godard), reflective voiceover
commentary and creative use of found footage (C. Marker), experimental
or archeological approaches (H. Farocki), combination of observational
techniques with expressive montage (F. Wiseman), specific devices (M.
Rau, L. Castaing-Taylor, and V, Paravel), alternative perspectives on
history (J-M Straub, C. Akerman, P. Costa, R. Panh), strategies of
/détournement/ and of poetic deconstruction of viral media (G. Thomson
and S. Maglioni), use of second hand images and radical editing (D.
Gagnon), recourse to fiction (E. Morris, N. Perada), and the list is not
exhaustive. These attempts show that aesthetics and politics, society
and its representation, knowledge and its embedding in institutional
forms, are interrelated on many levels, and this is why they allow for
complex philosophical investigations into ethical, political,
epistemological, and aesthetical aspects of reality today.____
This issue of /Cinema - Journal of Philosophy and the Moving Image/ aims
at exploring the complex ways in which documentary films, as both an
artistic form and a representation of the social, material, political,
and medial reality, intersect with philosophical thinking. ____
Submissions are accepted in English, Portuguese, and French and should
be sent to (cjpmi /at/ fcsh.unl.pt) <mailto:(cjpmi /at/ fcsh.unl.pt)>*____*
Prospective authors should submit a short CV along with the abstract.____
Abstract proposals (max. 500 words) are due on*April 1st*, 2020, and a
notice of acceptance will be sent to the authors on April 15, 2020.____
A selection of authors will be invited to submit full papers according
to the journal’s guidelines. Acceptance of the abstract does not
guarantee publication, since all papers will be subjected to double
blind peer-review.____
/Cinema/also invites submissions to its other sections: Interviews,
Conference Reports and Book Reviews. Please consult theweb site
<http://cjpmi.ifilnova.pt/submissions/>of the journal for further details.
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