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[Commlist] cfp: Conference Migrations, Citizenships, Inclusion
Fri Mar 12 11:54:54 GMT 2021
now online
Please note that, with the number of infections rising up again in Italy
as elsewhere in Europe, we were forced to reschedule our XXVI
International Conference of Film Studies (Rome, May 6-8, 2021) as an
*online event*.
We remind you that the issue of this year is *Migrations, Citizenships,
Inclusion. Narratives of Plural Italy, between Imaginary and Diversity
Politics* and the deadline for the proposal of abstracts is *March 31st
2021*. Below you find again our call for papers.
++++
*CALL FOR PAPERS*
**
*/Migrations, Citizenships, Inclusion./*
*/Narratives of Plural Italy, between Imaginary and Diversity Politics/*//
XXVI International Conference of Film Studies
//
Rome, May 6-8, 2021
Department of Philosophy, Communication, and Performing Arts -
University of Roma Tre
Confirmed Keynote Speakers:
Áine O’Healy (Loyola Marymount University), Igiaba Scego (writer and
journalist),
Jennifer Smith (Head of Inclusion, BFI)
The global pandemic crisis triggered by COVID-19, on the threshold of
2020, also had a tremendous impact on creative industries, whose supply
chains are kept on track, in Italy as elsewhere, thanks to mostly
intermittent workers, with a weak social protection. While claiming an
urgent recovery plan for the whole sector, we stand for a widening and
broader diversity in the gamut of interested parties. In this way, it
would be possible to respond to a global demand for participation,
coming from groups that are scarcely present in senior positions and are
associated with a strongly limited narrative. XXVI International
Conference of Film Studies /Migrations, Citizenships, Inclusion /aims to
meet this demand and return it in terms of analysis and operating proposals.
We solicit contributions addressing the specificities of “made in Italy”
between film and media, with reference to migration, citizenship and
inclusion. We would like to expand this conversation, in order to: a)
include, using a common framework, artistic platforms, and diversity
politics, and to b) confront them with modeling audio/visual products
and experiences from other countries, in Europe and in the global arena.
The double scope of this conference, as an ideal closure of the
interdisciplinary project /Imaginaries of Global Migration: Identity,
Citizenship, Interculturality /(Call for Ideas 2019-21), is to explore
the order of narratives in film and media on migrations, citizenship and
transculturality, and the space of viability for talents with a migrant
background in Italian creative industries.
Narratives on and from migrant and post-migrant subjects in film and
media represent a consolidated global field of practices and discourses,
offer a wide range of perspectives, address the diasporic circuits
sometimes exploited by creatives, or scrutinize the subtexts these
audio/visual productions convey across the border on the «color of the
nation».
The study of audio/visual narratives on migration, citizenship and
transculturality spread in the early 2000s, starting from commentaries
that emerged in the contexts of militant criticism and Italian Studies
and produced over the years mostly first mappings and case studies in
film and media scholarship. Only recently, in contributions focused on
transcultural encounter and oriented to cultural and postcolonial
studies, we have started to find analyses of (not only) audio/visual
narratives, recovering the traces of a minoritizing, and even
racializing, long-lasting imagery.
Meanwhile, in contributions more directly associated to the Film and
Media Studies scholarship, we have had a remarkable amount of
comparative mappings, on a European scale, in which audio/visual
practices on migrations, from and to Italy, and of transcultural
encounter, were confronted with experiences made in countries
experiencing a far more developed conversation on these issues, such as
United Kingdom and France.
Far more episodic were overviews concerning creatives with migrant
backgrounds aimed to: a) profile authors/authoresses in their artistic
career; b) analyze how they position themselves in relation to main
productive or artistic trends on a local, European or global scale; c)
investigate weaknesses, oppositions and gaps limiting the level of
inclusion in Italian creative industries.
We experience a relative stagnation in film and media narratives on
migrations, citizenship and transculturality, associated mostly with
uplifting stories of first arrival and reception. This stagnaion appears
conditioned by a political elite strongly polarized on these issues, as
well as by a news system that is oriented to be a sounding board for the
discontent of the social media audience rather than a body that gives
tools for reading the present. In addition, the context of UE-based and
local migration politics justify and support proactively securitarian,
sovereignist and necropolitic logics that have transformed the
Mediterranean Sea into the most tragic liquid frontier along the global
arena.
In response to this rather daunting scenario, made even more gloomy
during the global pandemic, here and there we can see timid signs of
liveliness and openness toward claiming more inclusive narratives, and a
niche for stories more in tune with the real country, especially in
/cinéma du réel /production, in TV series and formats for the web.
In civil society and movements, we can see an emerging activism among
young generations, in immigrant organizations, and grassroot unions
fighting for new rights and protections. We can feel it as well: a
claiming of formal and symbolic citizenship that has been postponed far
too long; a transfeminist protagonism that knows no bounds; a diffused
associationism requiring new spaces in representation and agency for
LGBT*QIA+ subjectivities, for persons with disabilities, and for
communities subject to discrimination only for being Roma, Sinti and
Travellers; to fight for large layers of the population watching their
fundamental rights be undermined, from healthcare to education.
On the other hand, there has been a hive of initiatives testifying –
from the persons concerned along with critics – about the emergence of a
new growing global awareness related to issues of privilege and
inequality in creative industries. Consider the activism of French
actresses of African descent (see the book /Noire n’est pas mon
métier/), the Diversity Standards of British Film Institute, the more
and more frequent experiences of non-traditional casting, or the recent
Representation and Inclusion Standards adopted by Academy Awards in
September 2020. It’s time for decision makers in Italian cultural
politics to to affirm the global sensibility and confront these
questions of inequality of opportunity, rather than condoning a stagnant
state of things.
We are seeking a variety of applications to present on the themes of the
conference that may include:
·_Modes of Representation_: mainstream narratives reinforcing the
dichotomy Us vs. Others and a stagnant imaginary concerning Italianness
and Europeanness, and narratives that, on the contrary, acting on a
platform of more or less explicit /artivism/, try to subvert the
dominant discursive order around migration, citizenship and
transculturality;
·_Esthetic Forms and New Languages_: audio/visual live and reproduced
expressive practices, mostly associated to pseudo-naturalistic,
sensationalist or parodic registers, prevailing in narratives concerning
migration, citizenship and transculturality, and those experiences that,
emerging among the interstitial spaces of the market, work to change the
horizon of artistic and exhibiting practices;
·_Documentary Narratives_: modes of representation concerning migrants
and foreign-born Italians in /cinéma du reel/, as seen between cultural
stereotypes and attempts at dialogue, approaches that reflect the
widespread polarization around the issues of transculturality and
experiences promoting instead social interaction, the participatory use
of media, and self-representation;
·_Made in Italy, Transnationalism, Anti/models_: traditions, modeling
experiences and case studies revealing the presence of interrelations
and exchange, cultural specificities and resistances, development
perspectives that are useful to compare on a Europe-wide and global scale;
·_Authors/Authoresses and Performers_: profiles of migrant and
post-migrant authorship and actoriality/stardom that left their mark on
the audio/visual Italian scene, investigated – for example – in their
relations with professional training places and esthetic and productive
reference modes; their most recognizable marks, on productive, symbolic
and stylistic plans; the plurality of their modes of positioning in
terms of identity, culture and politics;
·_Degree of Multilingualism_: the existing practices of verbal
communication displayed in audio/visual texts that highlight the
existence of a multilayered multilingualism, envisioning a hiatus
between the convoluted language of Italian laws and regulations, the
mixture of dialects and idiolects associated to a defined area and the
parental language and norms, which then trigger a plurality of dynamics
of affiliation in migrant and post-migrant subjectivities;
·_Diversity Politics in Creative Industries_: the existing national
initiatives in governance, the management of broadcasting public
service, and the self-regulation of the private sector that promotes
diversity politics both on and off screen, as well as the programs to
support the creativity of persons of foreign origins, which sometimes
rely on monitoring aimed at checking the degree of pluralism and
inclusion in creative industries and the impact of the initiatives promoted;
·_Bad Practices still in use in Italian film and media_: frequent
instances of blackface in popular TV shows and films; the routine
casting of foreign-born white Italians (or professional actors/actresses
imported from abroad) in the role of migrants and post-migrants; a
failure to use creatives of foreign origin when telling stories
concerning migration, citizenship and transculturality; the tendency to
ask creatives with a migrant background to deal only and exclusively of
migration; the habit of relegating performers of foreign or «mixed»
origins in secondary and ethnically connoted roles; the relations
existing between the strong survival of those bad practices and the
periodic rekindling of the crusade against a presumed «political correct
dictatorship» or «cancel culture».
Please send your 300-350 words abstracts for individual proposals with
3-5 keywords, a short biography, and your contacts to Prof. Leonardo De
Franceschi and prof. Ivelise Perniola at (romatreconf2021 /at/ uniroma3.it)
<mailto:(romatreconf2021 /at/ uniroma3.it)> by the *31^st of March, 2021*.
The acceptance of proposals will be confirmed by the 12^th of April, 2021.
Fee for applicants attending: 20 euros.
We welcome 20-minute papers. The languages of the conference are English
and Italian.
Organization: Department of Philosophy, Communication, and Performing
Arts - University of Roma Tre
Direction: Leonardo De Franceschi, Ivelise Perniola
Scientific Committee: Enrico Carocci, Ilaria A. De Pascalis, Marco M.
Gazzano, Stefania Parigi, Marta Perrotta, Veronica Pravadelli, Christian
Uva, Vito Zagarrio.
Organizing Committee: Emiliano Aiello, Christian Carmosino, Francesco
D’Asero, Leonardo Magnante, Giacomo Ravesi, Elio Ugenti, Mario Vai.
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