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[Commlist] 4th Edition of the Journal of Italian Cinema & Media Studies International Conference
Thu Oct 05 08:21:33 GMT 2023
*Call for Papers*
**
*Re-examining the past and envisioning the future of Italian cinema and
media *
*IV Edition of the /Journal of Italian Cinema & Media Studies/
International Conference***
*In person ONLY*
*The American University of Rome*
*13-15 June 2024*
*
*
*Keynote Speaker*
**
Áine O’Healy
Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles
*‘Non-Fiction Filmmaking in Contemporary Italy: Continuity and Change’*
The twenty-first century has witnessed a burgeoning of non-fiction
filmmaking in Italy, facilitated in part by technological developments
and in part by the desire to respond to rapidly shifting social
realities and changes in the natural environment. In light of recent
theoretical work on the political, aesthetic, and ethical dimensions of
the documentary, this talk will examine several non-fiction projects by
both established and emerging filmmakers focusing on various modalities
of human precarity in the global present. While critiquing the intimate
intrusions the filmmakers enact on their precarious subjects, it also
considers the complex affective operations inherent in this process.
*Áine O’Healy*is professor of modern languages and literatures at Loyola
Marymount University in Los Angeles. Her research interests lie in
transnational cinema, contemporary Italian film, and discourses of
migration, race, gender and sexuality in contemporary cultural
production. Her most recent book is /Migrant Anxieties: Italian Cinema
in a Transnational Frame/ (Indiana University Press, 2019). Among her
other publications is the volume /Transnational Feminism/ /in Film and
Media/ (2011) edited with Katarzyna Marciniak and Anikó Imre, as well as
a special issue of /Feminist Media Studies/ titled /Transcultural
Mediations and Transnational Politics of Difference /(2009). With
Marciniak and Imre she has curated the Global Cinema book series for
Palgrave since its inception in 2011.
*Organizing Committee*
Flavia Laviosa, Wellesley College, United States
Catherine Ramsey-Portolano, The American University of Rome, Italy
*
*
*Conference Committee*
Giorgio Bertellini, University of Michigan, USA
Flavia Brizio-Skov, University of Tennessee, USA
Milly Buonanno, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy
Frank Burke, Queen’s University, Canada
Jim Carter, Boston University, USA
Stephen Gundle, University of Warwick, UK
Russell Kilbourn, Wilfrid Laurier University, Canada
Gloria Lauri-Lucente, University of Malta, Malta
Bernadette Luciano, University of Auckland, New Zealand
Alex Marlow-Mann, University of Kent, UK
Gaoheng Zhang, University of British Columbia, Canada
Since its founding in 2012, the /Journal of Italian Cinema //& Media
Studies/has been at the forefront of efforts to transnationalize the
study of culture by conceiving cinema and media as always already
embedded in global flows of people, ideas, technical practices, funding
structures and artistic influences. From this perspective, Italian
cinema and media are not the static expression of a coherent national
experience; they are the dynamic outgrowth of multiple interactions,
exchanges, conflicts and cooperations. They are the worldwide
production, distribution and consumption of the many meanings of
‘Italy,’ which is one of the most overdetermined signs in circulation today.
Therefore, one of the main goals of JICMS has been to re-examine the
history of Italian cinema, tracing the nature and extent of its
influence by studying how it has engaged and collaborated with
international filmmakers across countries and time. The purpose of such
an endeavour has been to remap the relationship between Italian and
world cinema through critical analysis that trespasses ‘national cinema’
frameworks and theories,//and//the journal has succeeded in uncovering a
rich history of exchange and cross-pollination.
As evidence of this approach, we wish to call attention to numerous
articles in general issues as well as special issues on the
intersections between Italy and Asia (2:1 & 3, 2014), Latin America
(10:2, 2022 and 12:2, 2024), Slavic countries (11:3 & 4, 2023) and the
Mediterranean (12:1, 2024), along with a wide range of articles on
Nollywood, Europe and North America. These special issues highlight how
what we call Italian cinema has emerged from an international context of
collaboration between domestic and world cinemas during the past 100
years. They also engage in new critical approaches in order to recover
overlooked connections and re-compose them on historical and aesthetic
maps as well as examine commercial and distribution relations marked by
transnational dialogues and intergenerational conversations.
JICMS has also re-visited the history of Italian cinema with three
special issues: one, celebrating the 60^th anniversary of the David di
Donatello Awards (1956-2016) (4:2, 2016); two, the 70^th anniversary of
/Rome, Open City/(1945-2015)//(Bayman, Gundle, Schoonover eds.) (6:3,
2018); and three, the 85^th anniversary of the Centro Sperimentale di
Cinematografia in Rome (1935-2020) (9:2, 2021). In addition to these,
the journal has published two special issues on Federico Fellini’s
(Centorrino, Dalla Gassa, Minuz eds.) (9:1, 2021) and Tonino Guerra’s
(Burke ed.) (11:1, 2023) centennials (1920-2020), and more recently
history of ‘Film/Fashion/Costume’ (Paulicelli and Po DeLisle eds.)
(Forthcoming).
JICMS has also celebrated the history of Italian media by paying homage
to the 60^th anniversary of RAI (1954-2014) (3:1 & 2, 2015), followed by
the publication of the special issues ‘Gender issues: Trajectories of
change in the Italian mediascape’ (Buonanno and Faccioli eds.) (11:2,
2023), and more recently ‘/Giallo/! Going through the History of Italian
Television Crime Drama’ (Barra and Re eds.) (Forthcoming).
The year 2024 celebrates the 70^th anniversary of the birth of RAI and
we intend to take advantage of this stimulating fact by inviting
scholars to organize special sessions that would offer fresh and
innovative readings of neglected or misunderstood aspects of RAI’s
history. Sessions could be divided into two panels: the first inclusive,
in an effort to bring out the diversity and plurality of innovative
proposals; the second single-issue, aimed at the unprecedented goal of
recognizing and valorizing female figures who have contributed to the
making of Italian television history.
We welcome proposals that examine how Italian cinema, television, and
new media represent history and evoke historical memories. These forms
of media have significantly influenced cultural awareness, nurtured
national identity, and grappled with the intricacies of Italy's rich
historical heritage. We encourage scholars to explore the diverse ways
in which Italian visual media interact with history and its collective
memory.
Despite the impact of immigration on contemporary societies, immigration
cinema has been largely overlooked in scholarship. Therefore,
investigating the reasons of this exclusion will shed light on problems
related to discrimination, racism and the way mainstream media
manipulate culture and the public. It is time to write essays that can
bring to the attention of university students, scholars, and//general
readership an analysis of films that exemplify the situation of the
minority groups marginalized for political, religious, and ethnic
reasons. Showing how diversity is portrayed in cinema, and how these
films are received will reveal the many tensions that exist in the
margins of western affluent societies and will force the readers to
explore the many political implications of the word ‘diversity’. The
European Council has recognized the importance of European diversity
stating the necessity ‘to strengthen human rights, racial tolerance and
multicultural acceptance’ (CoE 1991:9), and many of the migrant films
from Italy are, in fact, an excellent example of the defense of these
values. Nevertheless, as we examine the transcultural identities of
migrant cinema, we need to keep in mind that monocultural constructs
sometimes remain resistant enough to deconstruction effort to a point
that they can destabilize the expected pro-immigrant cinematic output.
We also invite proposals on the topic of sponsored films and other forms
of ‘useful media’. Governments and businesses were among the first
organizations to recognize the utility of cinema, not least in Italy.
Some ideas for papers or panels include corporate cinema departments
(Olivetti, Fiat, Montecatini, Edison), canonical directors who worked on
sponsored films (Antonioni, Bertolucci, Fellini, Olmi), unknown or
understudied directors, anonymous films, methodological alternatives to
auteur theory, ideology and hegemony, governmentality and desire,
archives and sources, internal and external communications,
labor-management relations, human resources, fundraising, consumerism,
marketing and advertising or corporate image.
A new feature of this conference is to host presentations of recently
published/forthcoming books, edited volumes, JICMS special issues, or
academic works in progress, so we invite authors and editors to
contribute in ‘Meet the Author’ roundtables.
**
As we reflect on the state of the 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:*
• Transnational cinema & media studies
• Remediation of history and historic collective memory
• 70^th anniversary of RAI
• Gender and media studies in Italy
• Immigration cinema: Race, ethnicity and discrimination today
• Sponsored films
• Representations of violence against women in cinema and TV: Victims,
witnesses and perpetrators
• Reporting honor killings in Italian media
• Ageism and gender exclusion in the Italian film industry both on and
off screen
• Representations of mental health during the Covid-19 pandemic in
Italian films and media
• The new generation of filmmakers: Experimenting with cinematic
language and modes of storytelling
• Transmedia storytelling and Digital narratives
The conference will include the screening of 1-2 films with filmmakers
in attendance.
The languages of the conference are English, Italian and Spanish.
*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 250 words for pre-constituted 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 a *word.doc
format*, *no pdf*. We invite proposals for 20-minute
presentations(inclusive of brief film clips).
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*15 December 2023*.
Notification of acceptance of abstracts will be sent out to authors by
*15 January 2024.***
*
*
Conference registration fee includes: coffee, 3 lunches, opening and
closing receptions.
The deadline for inclusion in the conference program is *15 March 2024*.
Please, make every effort to pay conference fees before this date.
*€ **200 regular rate (professors, lecturers, instructors, post-doc, and
retired faculty)*
*€ **150 student rate ***
The registration fee will be paid to AUR through their website which
will be available in January 2024.
In case of withdrawals the registration fee will not be reimbursed.
In case of cancellation of the conference the registration fee will be
reimbursed.
**
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