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[Commlist] Call for Papers: Journal of Scandinavian Cinema Special Issue
Thu May 05 06:07:13 GMT 2022
Call for Papers: Journal of Scandinavian Cinema
Special Issue: ‘Contemporary Scandinavian Art Cinema and Screen Cultures
in Transition’
Please submit an abstract of 250–300 words for short subjects (3000
words) or feature articles (6000 words) before 15 August 2022to the
Special Issue editors, Joel Frykholm ((joel.frykholm /at/ litt.lu.se)
<mailto:(joel.frykholm /at/ litt.lu.se)>) and Anna Mrozewicz
((anna.mrozewicz /at/ litt.lu.se) <mailto:(anna.mrozewicz /at/ litt.lu.se)>), together
with a brief bio and select references. Final submissions are due on 2
January 2023. Only submissions that follow Journal of Scandinavian
Cinema’s Notes for Contributors will be accepted.
Full call here>>
https://www.intellectbooks.com/asset/66114/1/CfP_Journal_of_Scandinavian_Cinema_May_2022.pdf
<https://www.intellectbooks.com/asset/66114/1/CfP_Journal_of_Scandinavian_Cinema_May_2022.pdf>
‘Art cinema’, ‘art film’ and ‘arthouse’ are notoriously tricky concepts
to pin down with any exactitude. Yet such locutions remain key to
scholarly, critical, popular and governmental imaginaries of
Scandinavian cinema –they inform the ways in which a wide range of
actors talk and think about Scandinavian cinema and bring Scandinavian
films into existence and circulation. Or do they? How relevant are
notions such as ‘arthouse’ and ‘art film’ to the conceptual and
practical anchoring of Scandinavian cinema today? In this Special Issue
we aim to take stock and make an effort to position contemporary
Scandinavian art cinema in terms of institutional arrangements, formal
aesthetic aspects, production cultures and creative practices, and the
production and circulation of cultural value.
We raise the issue at a doubly opportune moment. On the one hand, a slew
of widely acclaimed Scandinavian films of recent date attest to the
persistence of art cinema and the figure of the auteur as core elements
of the identity and international reputation of Scandinavian cinema –
examples include Sami Blood(Amanda Kernell, 2017); Holiday (Isabella
Eklöf, 2018); Aurora (Miia Tervo, 2019); Queen of Hearts(May el-Toukhy,
2019); Sons of Denmark(Ulaa Salim, 2019); Another Round(Thomas
Vinterberg, 2020); Compartment No 6(Juho Kuosmanen, 2021); Flee(Jonas
Poher Rasmussen, 2021); The Worst Person in the World(Joachim Trier,
2021); Godland(Hlynur Pálmason, 2022); Holy Spider(Ali Abbasi, 2022);
and Triangle of Sadness(Ruben Östlund, 2022). On the other hand,
Scandinavian screen cultures and film industries are undergoing an
intense and multifaceted process of change, epitomized by the
breakthrough of streaming as the
default mode of engaging with media content – including film and
television. What is the location of Scandinavian arthouse in an
increasingly streaming based screen culture? In what ways do
Scandinavian auteurs and art film producers and distributors navigate a
media landscape increasingly geared towards nichification of media
content, individualization of media practices, and 24/7 digital
connectivity? What are the possible conditions for tapping
into new sources of funding (e.g. those provided by streaming giants
such as Netflix)? What are the cultural, economic and technological
factors that underpin some Scandinavian auteurs’ transition from film to
television (or their shuttling back and forth between the two)? What are
the ramifications of media convergence for film schools and other sites
of talent development? In what ways will national film policy adapt to
new conditions? Can it sustain its role as a main source of support for
Scandinavian arthouse? These are the kinds of questions that we hope
articles submitted to this Special Issue will help answer.
We welcome submissions on any topic related to contemporary Scandinavian
art cinema, but as indicated above, we are particularly interested in
the following issues and areas of inquiry:
• Case studies of arthouse projects and auteur practices on/for
streaming platforms
• Institutional perspectives (e.g. the role of film policy/cultural
policy, the film festival circuit, the economy of prestige, etc.)
• Production cultures (e.g. modes of authorship, creative
collaborations, etc.)
• Critical analysis of the notion of the Scandinavian auteur (e.g. with
regard to gendered, ethnic or class-related aspects of the idea of the
auteur)
• The role of film schools and other institutions for talent development
in the formation of contemporary Scandinavian arthouse
• Style and storytelling in contemporary Scandinavian art films
• Reception and audience research
• The discursive positioning of contemporary Scandinavian art cinema
• Contemporary Scandinavian arthouse and the production and circulation
of cultural value.
For general information or questions regarding Journal of Scandinavian
Cinema, please contact primary editor Anders Marklund
((anders.marklund /at/ litt.lu.se) <mailto:(anders.marklund /at/ litt.lu.se)>),
editors Mette Hjort, Gunnar Iversen and Pietari Kääpä, or managing
editor Rochelle Wright.
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