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[Commlist] cfp: Future of German Screen Studies Conference
Wed Feb 14 17:25:32 GMT 2024
A final reminder for this Friday's deadline to submit proposals for the
Future of German Screen Studies conference!
*CfP “The Future of German Screen Studies: Cultures, Media, Histories”
<https://germanscreenstudies.wp.st-andrews.ac.uk/2023/11/17/cfp-the-future-of-german-screen-studies-cultures-media-histories/>*
*A conference to be held at the University of St Andrews 19^th -21^st
June, 2024*
//
/Keynote Speakers/:
Seán Allan (University of St. Andrews), Erica Carter (King’s College
London), Johannes von Moltke (University of Michigan)
/Organisers/: Paul Flaig and Dora Osborne
*/Deadline for submitting proposals/: _February 16th, 2024_*
What is the future of German Screen Studies in the face of ongoing
technological transformation, heightened cultural and political strife,
and historical crises at levels national, European and global? By what
new methods or concepts might scholars and students, in the face of such
possibilities and challenges, explore German-language cinematic,
televisual, streaming or site-specific screen media, whether from the
historical past, the contemporary moment or a fast-approaching future?
Addressing these and other state-of-the field questions, this conference
will offer a forum to consider the future of German Screen Studies.
Drawing on the rich utopian vein in German thought (Adorno and Bloch,
Kluge and Tawada), Leslie Adelson (2017) describes a “future sense” that
allows one to perceive, in the face of historical catastrophe, not only
a more hopeful time to come, but also, counterfactually, a radically
different relationship to a seemingly settled past. With this
“future sense” in mind, the conference organisers invite submissions
creatively situated between the most recent developments, in topic,
method or argument, within German Screen Studies and this field’s
extraordinary legacy of scholarship, criticism and debate from across
the last century, from Emilie Altenloh’s 1914 dissertation to Hito
Steyerl’s /The Wretched of the Screen/ (2012), Siegfried Kracauer to
Miriam Hansen, Harun Farocki to Thomas Elsaesser.
As these and other figures suggest, the field
of German Screen Studies has always had a productively porous
relationship with other disciplines, from media studies to art history,
sociology to philosophy, as well as to various sites of artistic,
literary and political practice. It has approached German histories of
the moving image as much through genre and auteur as through visual
analysis and historical context, critical theory and technical medium.
Through both translation and interpretation, German screen scholars have
introduced a range of influential methods and concepts to the humanities
at large, variously drawing on the heady intellectual and artistic
culture of German silent cinema, the methods and theories of the
Frankfurt School, insidious modes of fascist propaganda, debates around
representation and the Holocaust, the experimentalism of numerous
avant-garde movements, feminist and queer modes of documenting or
dramatizing gender and desire, and archaeologies of visual media both
analogue and digital. The epoch of the moving image has corresponded
to Germany’s tumultuous modern history, spanning /Kaisereich/ and Weimar
democracy, Nazi dictatorship and divided, then reunified republics, with
both stark divisions and underlying continuities between each era’s
media landscape. This tumultuous history has
required German screen scholars to navigate a complex set of moments and
movements, institutions and industries: UFA and DEFA, Berlinale and
Oberhausen, state-funded television and Netflix series,
/Autorenkino/ and video installation, /Heimatfilm/ and the Berlin
School. This is not to mention the varied extra-territorial links
between German screen cultures and the wider world, from the
circulations of emigres and exiles, immigrants and refugees to
international co-productions and global media conglomerates. The current
challenges preoccupying many of the Berlin Republic’s screen artists and
performers—resurgent populism, technological acceleration, ecological
crisis, economic precarity—might thus best be studied through an
approach both transnational and interdisciplinary.
“The Future of German Screen Studies” aims to take stock of our
current understanding of these and others /cultures/, /media/ and
/histories/ in order to map where this field may be heading as well as
offer new genealogies of those images, figures and texts that have thus
far defined it. Beyond those mentioned above, topics of papers and
panels may also include but are not limited to:
– German Screen Studies in the time of the Anthropocene
– Queer genealogies from Weimar culture to Fassbinder to the Teddy
Award
– Animals and cyborgs, plants and things: The post-human on-screen
– The politics and practice of remembering, archiving and
re-mixing German screen history
– Representations and reflections of racial and/or ethnic difference
– New media historiographies and archaeologies versus canonical
chronologies and familiar periodizations
– German-language genres familiar and neglected, popular and cult
– Colonial connections and post-colonial circulations
– Documentary modes from travelogues and propaganda to essay films
and experiments
– Art cinema’s institutions, auteurs and aesthetics
– The politics of gender behind the camera and below the line
– The “small” screen, from early televisual experiments to
transnational streaming hits
– German Screen Studies meets German media theory (Kittler, Ernst,
Vismann, Siegert)
– Avant-garde legacies across cinema, television and visual arts
– New methods of Scholarship, Criticism and Communication:
Audio-Visual Criticism, Podcasting, Blogging, Social media
– Teaching and Pedagogy challenges and possibilities post-COVID,
pre-AI and amidst an Anglophone crisis in language learning
Please submit proposals of 250-300 words to (pf49 /at/ st-andrews.ac.uk)
<mailto:(pf49 /at/ st-andrews.ac.uk)> and (do38 /at/ st-andrews.ac.uk)
<mailto:(do38 /at/ st-andrews.ac.uk)> by 16^th of February, 2024.
A limited number of bursaries are available to contribute to travel and
accommodation costs for post-graduate and early career speakers.
This event is funded by the DAAD (German Academic Exchange) as part of a
three-year Promoting German Studies networking grant to
the German Screen Studies Network
(https://germanscreenstudies.wp.st-andrews.ac.uk/
<https://germanscreenstudies.wp.st-andrews.ac.uk/>), co-directed by Dora
Osborne and Paul Flaig.
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