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[Commlist] JICMS conference CFP: Italian cinema and media: Past and present, continuity and change, expectations for the future
Tue Oct 19 17:55:28 GMT 2021
*Call for Papers*
**
*Italian cinema and media: *
*Past and present, continuity and change, expectations for the future*
*Third Edition of the /Journal of Italian Cinema & Media Studies/
International Conference*
**
*In person ONLY*
**
*The American University of Rome*
**
*16-18 June 2022*
**
*Keynote Speaker*
Professor Stephen Gundle
University of Warwick, UK
* 'Looking Back, Looking Forward: The Changing Shape of Italian Cinema
and Media Studies'***
This address will explore the way the landscape of Italian film studies
has changed in recent decades both in Italy and abroad. It will
consider, among other things, the way in which ideas of a canon have
been challenged and reinterpreted, evolutions in (and displacements
of) efforts to interpret Italian film production as a whole, the impact
of the decline of Italian cinema as a commercial and artistic powerhouse
on the study of film, and the growing attention to television and new
media. The address will re-visit and assess recent and not-so-recent
attempts to judge the study of Italian cinema as a field or to shift the
agenda in some way. It will conclude by seeking (modestly) to indicate
some possible fruitful avenues of future research.
*Stephen Gundle*is Professor of Film and Television Studies at the
University of Warwick. A cultural and political historian, he has always
paid close attention to Italian cinema and television. Among his books
are /Between Hollywood and Moscow: The Italian Communists and the
Challenge of Mass Culture, 1943-91/ (Duke, 2000; Italian edition Giunti,
1995); /Mass Culture and Italian Society from Fascism to the Cold
War/ (with David Forgacs, Indiana, 2007; Italian edition Il Mulino,
2007); /Bellissima: Feminine Beauty and the Idea of Italy/ (Yale, 2007;
Italian edition Laterza 2007); /Glamour: A History/ (OUP, 2008); /Death
and the Dolce Vita/ (Canongate, 2011; Italian edition Rizzoli, 2012);
/Mussolini's Dream Factory/ (Berghahn, 2013; Italian edition Kaplan,
forthcoming); /Fame amid the Ruins/ (Berghahn, 2020).
*Organizing Committee*
Flavia Laviosa, Wellesley College, United States
Catherine Ramsey-Portolano, The American University of Rome, Italy
**
*Scientific Council*
Sharofat Arabova, State Tojikfilm Institution, Dushanbe, Tajikistan
Luca Barra, University of Bologna. Italy
Benoît Carbone, Marco, Brunel University, United Kingdom
Giorgio Bertellini, University of Michigan, United States
Katarzyna Biernacka-Licznar, University of Wroclaw, Poland
Flavia Brizio-Skov, University of Tennessee, United States
Milly Buonanno, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy
Frank Burke, Queen’s University, Canada
Jim Carter, Boston University, United States
Venesa Coscia, (CONICET) University of Buenos Aires, Argentina
Franca Faccioli, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy
Anastasia Grusha, Lomonosov Moscow State University, Russia
Monica Jansen, Utrecht University, The Netherlands
Karol Jóźwiak, University of Lodz, Poland
Bernadette Luciano, University of Auckland, New Zealand
Annachiara Mariani, University of Tennessee, United States
Alex Marlow-Mann, University of Kent, United Kingdom
Mariano Mestman, (CONICET) University of Buenos Aires, Argentina
Anna Miller-Klejsa, University of Lodz, Poland
Laura Rascaroli, University College Cork, Ireland
Susanna Scarparo, University of Sydney, Australia
Svetlana Sidorova,LomonosovMoscow State University, Russia
Maria Bonaria Urban, Royal Netherlands Institute in Rome, Italy
Alessandra Vannucci, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Gaoheng Zhang, University of British Columbia, Canada
The year 2022 marks the 10^th anniversary of the publication of the
first issue of the /Journal of Italian Cinema & Media Studies/.
Published by Intellect (UK) and co-sponsored by Wellesley College
(USA), it remains the only English language journal on Italian cinema
and media.
In the past ten years,we have been inclusive in our effortsto establish
connections with scholars from several continents. We have also made it
our mission to explore the resonance of Italian film in the world across
times, themes, styles and genres. After publishing the first four
issues— twoon Italy and Asia (2:1 & 2:3, 2014), a third on Italy and
LatinAmerica (10:2, 2022), and the fourth one on Italy and
post-socialist countries (2023), and organizing two international
conferences (2027 & 2019), the Journal has created a large community of
scholars of diverse disciplines, all engaged in studying the artistic
intersections between Italy and other countries.
As we celebrate this anniversary, we are prepared to move forward with
new explorations and discussions aimed at expanding these interconnected
academic communities, with a focus on a broader understanding of Italian
cinema and media in international artistic contexts.
The past decade has marked a series of successes for the /Journal of
Italian Cinema & Media Studies/. This has coincided with a period during
which the global media landscape has undergone remarkable
transformations: from the Internet and World Wide Web to the rise of
social networks and their deep impact on social interactions; from the
ubiquitous smartphone emerging as the quintessential example of media
convergence to the new conglomerates of a fast-changing panorama of
platforms, devices and streaming services.
As media systems are always both driven by and the drivers of
technological and social transformations, they are inextricable from new
forms of everyday life, politics, society and culture, which scholarship
must understand, analyse, and challenge.
With evolving media comes the development of new economies, production
policies and distribution platforms, which match new and diverse
formats, audiences, consumption patterns and modalities of interaction
with the moving image. The relation of traditional cinema with evolving
technologies, screen media, visual cultures and digital, social and
interactive platforms has reconfigured what cinema means as production,
consumption and prosumerism take shape under new landscapes of
transmedia content and transnational audiences. From Netflix to YouTube
and from Instagram to TikTok, cinematic and screen languages have
accommodated the messages, interactions, arts and expressions of a
changing world. This is a world dominated by an awareness of the urgency
of climate, humanitarian, health and economic crises, along with the
rise of movements for change and equality, including #MeToo and Black
Lives Matter, which take on a global significance as well as cognizance
of national- and region-specific approaches.
All of these changes have affected the ways we can and should look at
cinema and media broadly speaking, but also how we can conceive of the
cultural complexities of Italian histories and cultures and what
challenges are faced by scholarship over the next years. Understanding
Italian cinema and media cultures today means looking at how Italian
cinema finds a place in the new media ecologies and economies at a
national and transnational level as well as how YouTube, TikTok and
social media have offered audiences new ways to narrate Italian cultures
and specificities, how Italians communicate their diverse identities,
and how these are shaped by new dynamics of inter-relation an distinction.
Looking at Italian cinema and media today thus also means understanding
how the changing landscape of the cinema and media play an essential
role in reframing Italian-ness in a changing national and global
culture. New media have inherited the traditional forms in which our
identities have been communicated, from our histories and the arts
traditions on Instagram to YouTubers discussing our food cultures and
Made in Italy design sensibilities. Social media have created new
symbolic and relational bonds in the transnational web of connections
and distinctions that tie Italians at home to those abroad. Media also
have played and will play a key role in framing and re-framing the place
of Italy in a postcolonial and decolonised perspective, offering
visibility and providing points of access for non-white-centric ideas of
Italian-ness, new subjectivities, and groups advocating for key issues
such as migrants’ rights and an inclusive citizenship model for
second-generation Italians.
As Italian media and cinema productions, agents, and audiences both
national and transnational represent a lively and complex terrain of
analysis, JICMS strives to capture and understand their complexities in
all their newly-evolving forms.
As we reflect on the state of the disciplines (cinema and media
studies), we open this CFP to a wide range of themes, with the intent of
offering a unifying horizon that will allow scholars to explore diverse
fields and topics in a broad international context and move forward with
new studies, building the future of both the discipline and the journal.
With this CFP, the conference organizers invite proposals from scholars,
independent researchers, cinema and media professionals, and graduate
students for single papers, pre-constituted panels, and roundtables.
Possible topics include, but are not limited to:
·Post-cinema (intersectionality of cinema and social media)
·Social media (media ecologies, national branding, Facebook, Whatsapp)
·Cinema and media on demand: Amazon, Hulu, Netflix (from the theater to
the home, watchers as content creators, multiplatform television,
algorithms and taste)
·Non-theatrical cinema and media (industrial cinema and media,
commercials, propaganda, didactic cinema and media)
·Immersive technologies (virtual reality, augmented reality, mixed
reality, spatial audio and artificial intelligence)
·Series (TV series, web series, pay TV, new frontiers in storytelling,
transnational narratives, international circulation of TV series)
·Media, cultures, identity, politics, gender (mass vs. niche media,
‘Audience’ and practices of participation, representations of power,
popular culture, feminism, (in)equities in access and digital divide,
politics of media and media in politics, embodiment, multicultural
media, identities from stars to selfies, mediation and remediation,
ideologies, gender)
·Crime television (crime and crisis, restaging history, social change
through popular crime media, challenging stereotypes and discrimination,
transnational productions, transcultural formats)
·Popular genres and transnationalism (Western, Sci-Fi)
·Migrant stardom (e.g. Raffaella Carrà)
·Women in media industries (directors, writers, actors, transnational
mobility)
·Writing in cinema (screenwriting, revising, translating, subtitling,
adaptations)
·Reception (transnational, intermedial, critical, popular)
·Plurimediality and transmediality (cartoons, comics, graphic novels,
/fotoromanzi/)
·Political cinema (reality, history, fiction)
·Archives and digital resources
·Cinema and the digital humanities
·Plurilingualism in cinema
·Landscape, environment, urban and rural in cinema
·Comedy and transnational reception
·Italian cinema and Latin American cinema
·Italian cinema and post-socialist cinemas
·Postcolonial Italian cinema
·Italian cinema in dialogue with other art/cultural trends (theatre,
visual arts, literature)
·Italian cinema and the labor world/labor activities
* Form(s) in contemporary cinema
* Critical Posthumanism and Italian Cinema
* Housing and the home in Italian cinema and television
·Cinema schools in Italy (history, curricula, international students’
careers) (e.g. Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia in Rome, other CSC
schools).
The languages of the conference are English and Italian. *Proposals for
virtual papers will not be considered.*
Please send an abstract of 250 words plus a short bio of 100 words for
single papers, or 350 words for panels (including the aims of the panel
and summaries of each contribution specifying the names of filmmakers,
artists, films, media etc.) followed by individual titles, panelists’
bios, current academic affiliation, and emails for pre-constituted
panels with 3 speakers, or roundtables in Italian or in English in a
word.doc format, *no pdf*. We invite proposals for 20-minute
presentations(inclusive of film clips). We welcome presentations using
both conventional tools and video-essay commentaries.
Abstracts for consideration should be submitted to Flavia Laviosa at
(flaviosa /at/ wellesley.edu) <mailto:(flaviosa /at/ wellesley.edu)>.
The deadline for the submission of abstracts is*5 December 2021*.
Notification of acceptance of abstracts will be sent out to authors by
*30 December 2021.***
Participants will receive a complimentary copy of JICMS and will be able
to purchase Intellect publications at a special conference discounted price.
Conference registration fee includes: 2 lunches, opening and closing
receptions.
The deadline for inclusion in the conference program is *15 March 2022*.
Please, make every effort to pay conference fees before this date.
€ 200 regular rate (€ 100 for 1 day)
€ 150 student rate (€ 75 for 1 day)
The registration fee will be paid to AUR and the website will be
available in January 2022.
In case of withdrawals the registration fee will not be reimbursed.
In case of cancellation of the conference the registration fee will be
reimbursed.
*Extra***
*Post-conference tour. Destination to be determined: Sunday 19 June 2022***
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