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[Commlist] cfp: The Essay Film as a Self-Representational Mode / Ekphrasis - Images, Cinema, Theory, Media
Thu Jan 07 12:32:02 GMT 2021
-------- Forwarded Message --------
Date: Wed, 6 Jan 2021 16:46:17 +0000
From: Fatima Chinita <(chinita.fatima /at/ gmail.com)>
To: (nico.carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
Dear Nico Carpentier,
I would be very grateful if you could *post *the following e-mail
(cf.bellow) containing a CFP for an *academic journal issue *(journal
/Ekphrasis - Images, Cinema, Theory, Media/), vol, 26, issue 2/2021
entitled "The Essay Film as a Self-Representational Mode" and of which I
am the guest editor.
Submissions from authors are free of charge in all stages of the process.
My contact email: (chinita.fatima /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(chinita.fatima /at/ gmail.com)>
I wish you a good, healthy and productive 2021,
Fátima Chinita
********
CFP
*The Essay Film as a Self-Representational Mode **/
/*
/Ekphrasis /- /I//mages, Cinema, Theory, Media,/Vol. 26, Issue 2/2021
Issue editor: Fátima Chinita
In cultural anthropology, subjectivity is an inherent part of the human
condition; our perception, affects and sense-making stem directly from
it. It exists at an individual level because human beings are sentient
and thinking subjects reflecting upon themselves and upon the context in
which they are inserted. At a social level, subjectivity depends on
large scale cultural formations which predetermine choices and
behavioural patterns imbuing them with political overtones. In cinema,
these two components of subjectivity may be expressed through what Lisa
Lebow calls first person documentary films, which designate a /mode of
address/ and not a filmic genre: “[…] these films ‘speak’ from the
articulated point of view of the filmmaker who readily acknowledges her
subjective position” (2012, 1).
These films include a broad range of practices: the essay film, the
self-portrait and the video diary, among others. Historically, essay
films have been directed at least since the 1920s and the cinematic
masterpiece /Man with a Movie Camera/ (Dziga Vertov, 1929) is actually
placed in this category by many film theoreticians. From the 1970s
onwards it proliferated across different geographies and cultures,
spreading in the world cinema landscape. Generally considered a hybrid
and creative form of cinematic expression, the essay film eludes a
single and irrefutable definition, which makes it an interesting topic
for research and ever more so nowadays that film is mixing with other
sculptural art forms and invading the gallery and the museum.
Commentators’ positions on the essay film vary in relation to its form
as well as its contents and mission, but it seems relatively safe to
perceive it as being located in a universal in-betweenness having to do
with typology, artistic or ideological goal, documental or critical
stance, narrative or factual condition, interstitial framing, and so on.
Essay films, as a type of first person cinema (although Laura Rascaroli
in 2009 distinguished between these two film varieties), may be poetical
or accented, artistic or political, personal (literally about a person
or self) or collective (about a community of whatever sort), covertly or
assumedly autobiographical, descriptive or reflexive. More than other
films − which are per se authorial statements inasmuch as all works
reflect their authors − these films are made to be explicitly about the
filmmakers. “The matter of knowing ourselves or coming to consciousness
about ourselves is not only a central ontological question […] but is
also at the centre of the project of self-representation” (Lebow 2012, 4).
These films may range from the self-presentation of the author and/or
their artistic praxis to the questioning of social realities
subjectively perceived from the author’s perspective. In fact, for the
purposes of this publication both are considered self-representation.
Therefore, this journal issue will focus on essay films with a twofold
perspective, simultaneously artistic and political/sociological. Using
the concept of self-representation as ideology and dealing with
/authorial self-representation/ (a specific person/people, lives,
family, internal experiences, artists’ professional engagement) and
authorial /ideological engagement/ (which corresponds to one's world
vision through an ideological choice of form and contents), we are
opening this call for papers as a way of writing about /oneself in the
world/ and writing about the world /through oneself./ Both perspectives
can be made to coalesce, the essay film as an art form being the uniting
factor, independently of the author's films main goal(s).
We are aiming at a heterogeneous collection of transnational articles
and accept both theoretical and/or practical study cases. We strongly
encourage articles about world cinema and lesser known filmic works, as
well as articles with novel approaches.**
*Possible topics of interest include, but are not limited, to the
following: *
(a) Artistic Films: the art, the medium.
Self-reflexive forms and practices of the essay film.
Poetics and personal methodologies of the essay as pedagogic strategies.
Essay film as an in-between cinematic /position/.
Self-representation in contemporary audiovisual art/culture.
Essay films about film/art and authorial creativity.
Reception and relationship with film viewers.
Essay films for gallery and museums.
The essay film across disciplinary borders.
(b) Subject Films: the personal, the familiar, the cultural.
Autobiographical representations and self-examination.
Affinities/divergences with the self-portrait.
The self in memories or the archive.
Branding: self-representation and authorship.
Female, queer and minorities’ creative gestures.
Self-consciousness and the body.
First person cinema and video confessions.
(c) Accented films: ideology and politics.
Gendered, postcolonial, diasporic, political cinema.
Contesting/interrogating the world /through/ the self.
Relationship with other branches of knowledge.
A world phenomenon dealing with local or transnational themes.
Dialectic arguments: thesis and antithesis.
The essay film as an instrument of change.
Socio-political interests of the author.
*Guide for authors:*
**
The language for this issue of the journal is English.
All articles need to be proofread by a native English speaker before
being sent to the journal
Articles: 5,000-9,000 words, including a 300-word abstract, 5-7
keywords, a list of references, plus footnotes. Notes should be used
with frugality; if something is worth saying, it usually is worth saying
in the text.
Book reviews 2,000-3,000 words. The books you propose must be recent.
Both the proposal and the final text should observe the submission
guidelines to be found on the journal’s website:
https://www.ekphrasisjournal.ro/index.php?p=subm
<https://www.ekphrasisjournal.ro/index.php?p=subm>. You will find
suggested readings for this issue there as well.
Deadline proposals (250 - 300 words): April 5.^_
Acceptance notice: April 20.
Final submission deadline: July 30. We recommend that articles be sent
before this date. Authors must be prepared for quick rewrites in
September and October.
Publication date: December 2.
Submissions from authors are free of charge in all stages of the process.
Send your submissions to: Fátima Chinita
<(chinita.estc /at/ gmail.com)>
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