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[Commlist] CFP for Comparative Cinema 21: Cinematographic Pathologies: Representations and Figurations of the Sick Body
Wed Jul 12 13:21:48 GMT 2023
Call For Papers Nº 21 (Fall 2023)
Cinematographic Pathologies: Representations and Figurations of the Sick
Body
Guest Editors: Alan Salvadó, Àngel Quintana and Daniel Pérez-Pamies
https://raco.cat/index.php/Comparativecinema/announcement/view/181
The Covid-19 pandemic has established the sick body as one of the main
axes of contemporary thought and 21st-century visual culture. There has
been a resurgence in the importance of the body and mental health in
media perceptions that has changed political, economic and social life
at the global level.
The militaristic declarations of struggle and resistance against the
virus (the invisible enemy) in most Western countries masked the
impossibility that these states could succeed in managing and
safeguarding the welfare of bodies, paralyzing an economic system that,
meanwhile, is based on the racialization, exploitation and enslavement
of specific bodies (Preciado 2022). A few days after the Covid-19
pandemic outbreak, Jacques Rancière observed, somewhat perplexed, that
the medical debate on the Coronavirus was not concentrated on academic
research on the circulation of the virus, instead it was focused on the
reception capacity of hospitals (Rancière 2021). The figures,
statistics, percentages and ratios associated with the neoliberal
imaginary made sick bodies invisible and turned the occupation rate of
hospital beds into the focus of attention. But while the quantification
of the pandemic dominated the public discourse, how was the sick body
being portrayed in 21st-century visual culture?
Going from the iconographic archive images of the Spanish flu from the
early 20th century to bodies sick with AIDS in the late 20th century,
and onto the recent figurations of the Coronavirus pandemic, the sick
body has been a constant in many film poetics. Beyond the figuration of
pain and the resulting care, the sick body has enabled filmmakers to
both construct discourses on the depiction of sickness and to create a
constellation of tales in which pathologies and their consequences have
existed at the center of the dramatic and even tragic heart of stories.
Within popular culture, classical melodrama and the attendant soap
operas have constructed one of the most fertile imaginaries in relation
to the sick body and the buildings that provide it with shelter:
hospitals, sanatoriums, asylums, medical offices and lounges with
couches. Meanwhile, modernity has made the sick body one of its central
motifs. Parallel to the rewriting of certain classicist formulas, a
large proportion of the corpus of modern cinema is built on an array of
characters who express their discontent with society through the
performativity of illnesses which, in turn, become a symptom of the
impossibility of these people finding their place in the world (Font
2002). From The Eternal Breasts (Chibusa yo eien nare, Kinuyo Tanaka,
1955) to The Silence (Tystnaden, Ingmar Bergman, 1963) and Red Desert
(Il deserto rosso, Michelangelo Antonioni, 1966), on to A Woman Under
the Influence (John Cassavetes, 1974), we find examples in which the
sick body epitomizes this existential unease. Finally, an in-depth study
of much of contemporary cinema situates the issue of mental illness as a
way of illustrating the bifurcation between the real world and an
imagined or virtual one. Amnesia, schizophrenia, multiple personality
and bipolarity are just some of the disorders that are used as a pretext
to break new ground in both the spectacle-based aesthetic related to the
digital sphere and the “narrative complexification” (Elsaesser 2021) by
which the body is transformed into terra incognita (Imbert 2019). And
amid the gamut of bodies that have been altered by computer technology,
producing an artificial rejuvenation, the sick body becomes a mere
vestige of the real.
However, the sick body has not only been an object of study throughout
the history of cinema, the field of medicine and its technological
evolution have also enabled us to explore new ways of envisioning it,
from radiography to ultrasound and on to microscopy. At the visual
crossroads between cinema and medicine, we have witnessed the creation
of what we could call “medical films”; a cinematographic subgenre that
has become an authentic visual experimental laboratory with regard to
the sick body, as we have seen in the films of Yervant Gianikian and
Angela Ricci Lucchi (Ruiz 2016).
In this age of bodily immortality, thanks to digital technologies and
Artificial Intelligence (AI) and in light of the still-recent
consequences of the Coronavirus pandemic, consideration of the sick body
in cinema is evolving as a necessary journey that can enable us to
critically update some of the issues which until recent years had been
the backbone of our visual culture and our approach to the way sickness
is portrayed.
Issue 21 of Comparative Cinema is calling for articles of 5,500-7,000
words in length that address these issues, using a comparative approach.
Lines of research may include (though are not limited to) the following:
- Iconography of the sick body in cinema: the existence of a series of
visual motifs which, from different artistic disciplines, have built up
a certain expressive and recognizable imaginary on the question of how
illness is portrayed in cinema.
- Historiography of the sick body in cinema: from early cinema to
contemporary film, the sick body has come to represent a central issue
for the evolution of both cinematographic aesthetics and their
figuration through cinematographic language.
- Portrayal of the pandemic in cinema: pandemics have become the
universal argument par excellence for viewing illness and our
relationship with it from a collective perspective.
- The performativity of the sick body: portraying the disease has often
been a real challenge for actors. The need to empathize with others in
order to portray the illness is one of the most problematic areas in
terms of directing and performative creativity.
- Biopolitical figurations of the sick body: ways in which the ideas of
Michel Foucault are displayed in contemporary film and in light of the
ethical and aesthetic consequences of Covid-19.
- Invisibilities of the sick female body: some of the most common
diseases in women have frequently been edited out of cinema’s visual
discourses. Pioneering experiences and possible breakthroughs.
Deadline for submission of papers (RACO platform): 01/09/2023
Publication: Fall 2023
Bibliography
Elsaesser, Thomas. 2021. The Mind-Game Film. Distributed Agency, Time
Travel, and Productive Pathology. New York: Routledge.
Font, Domènec. 2002. Cuerpo a cuerpo. Barcelona: Galaxia Gutenberg.
Imbert, Gérard. 2019. Crisis de valores en el cine posmoderno. Madrid:
Cátedra.
Preciado, Paul B. 2022. Dysphoria Mundi. Barcelona: Anagrama.
Rancière, Jacques. 2021. “¿Una buena ocasión?” In Pandémik, edited by
Javier Bassas and Laura Llevadot. Barcelona: Ned Ediciones.
Ruiz Rodríguez, Paula Arantzazu. 2016. “Operar el fotograma:
intervenciones en el género del cine médico del Novecento y la Primera
Guerra Mundial en Oh! Uomo, de Yervant Gianikian y Angela Ricci-Lucchi.”
L'Atalante. Revista de estudios cinematográficos, 21: 81−92.
Contact
(comparativecinema /at/ upf.edu)
(alan.salvado /at/ udg.edu)
(angel.quintana /at/ udg.edu)
(daniel.perez /at/ udg.edu)
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