Archive for calls, January 2025

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[Commlist] cfp: Displaced Images, Iconographic Survivals: Cinema and the Public Sphere

Mon Jan 27 18:21:58 GMT 2025




CFP

Displaced Images, Iconographic Survivals: Cinema and the Public Sphere

L'Atalante. Revista de Estudios Cinematográficas <https://www.revistaatalante.com/index.php/atalante/announcement/view/119>

Acceptance of submissions: April 1st to April 30th 2025

Date of publication: January 2026

Coordinators: Glòria Salvadó, Iván Pintor, Teresa Sorolla y Jordi Montañana

Images representing events, upheavals or significant acts in the public sphere are often articulated through visual forms that have been developed by cinema. Media representations of the effects of and responses to tragedies such as the floods that ravaged Valencia in October in 2024, the Los Angeles fires in 2025, the Hamas attack on Israeli territory in October 2023, or the assassination of the head of Russia’s Chemical, Biological and Nuclear Defence Forces, Igor Kirillov, in December 2024, often seem to draw on the legacy of the disaster film genre, the imaginary of the Cold War spy film, or the contemporary thriller. It is a plausible hypothesis in relation to the impact of events (Boucheron, 2024) that there is a specific set of iconographic frameworks for representing both ordinary and extraordinary occurrences in the public sphere that appeal to the spectator’s prior knowledge of certain visual imaginaries and mise-en-scène models.

In recent years, the visual construction of the public sphere has undergone a radical transformation, with the emergence of processes of acceleration and upheaval and the disruption of traditional forms of representation (Salvia, 2022), resulting in the appearance of some unexpected new visual codes. This transformation has taken place in relation to four basic categories: technology and war; health and the climate emergency; the rearticulation of gender identities; and migration and racial conflicts.

The aim of this monographic issue of /L’Atalante/ is to explore the context of interaction between images of the public sphere and cinema, conceiving of the latter as a medium that both reflects and promotes the creation of iconographic codes for the visual representation of reality. Iconography and iconology have traditionally been concerned with tracing survivals (/Nachleben/) of gestures, figures and forms of representation from the art of classical antiquity through to contemporary painting and sculpture. By studying visual motifs, various authors (Balló 2000; Bergala, Balló 2016; Balló, Salvadó 2023) have analysed the iconographic patterns of cultural representation that have been conveyed and reinterpreted over the course of history in different media, with a consideration of the centrality of cinema: the woman in the window, the cowboy disappearing on the horizon, the ecstatic dance in the rain and the Pietà are all powerful images that have played a vital role in film history as sites of affective engagement.

 Throughout the history of visual arts, motifs have been subject to constant circulation and reinterpretation, a process Erwin Panofsky (1982) identified as /pseudomorphosis/—the adaptation of established visual patterns to new social contexts and expressive needs. The pressing need to undertake a similar inquiry into contemporary visual culture—examining how gestures, disruptions, and contextual shifts link visual forms to political and social affects—forms the basis of this call for papers. Specifically, we invite contributions that adopt a comparative iconographic approach to investigate topics, methodologies, and research trajectories that engage with the following themes:

  * Iconographies of political affects in cinema
  * Representations of the rearticulation of gender identities in cinema
    and in the public sphere
  * Forms of representation of the climate emergency in the dialogue
    between cinema and the public sphere
  * Visual and technological codes of war, AI, video surveillance and
    biopolitics in cinema
  * Cinema and iconologies of power
  * Iconographies of resistance and civil protest
  * Postcolonialism, migratory and racial conflicts in cinema
  * Forensic aesthetics, desktop documentary

*Publication Guidelines*

  * Only original and unpublished manuscripts, in either Spanish or
    English, will be considered. Submissions must have a length between
    5,000 and 7,000 words.
  * The Editorial Board will prioritize submissions that present
    innovative and unique topics, particularly those addressing subjects
    not previously explored in the journal.
  * Submitted manuscripts will undergo an initial review by the
    Editorial Board to assess their alignment with the journal’s focus
    on film analysis studies and the objectives of the issue. Selected
    manuscripts will then proceed to a double-blind peer review process.
  * Authors of manuscripts that are accepted and successfully pass the
    peer review process will be responsible for covering the costs
    associated with the translation or proofreading of their work, to be
    carried out by the journal's designated translator.
  * Please note that /L’Atalante/ does not offer financial compensation
    for published contributions.
  *
    *No payment from the authors* will be required.
  * For detailed information regarding publication guidelines and the
    submission process, please refer to the journal's website.
    <https://revistaatalante.com/index.php/atalante/about/submissions>

REFERENCES

Azoulay, Ariella. (2008). /The Civil Contract of Photography/. New York: Zone Books.

Boucheron, Patrick (2024), /Fechas que hicieron historia. Diez formas de crear un acontecimiento/, Barcelona: Anagrama.

Salvia, Mattia (2022). /Interregno. Iconografie del XXI secolo/. Rome: Nero.

Balló, Jordi (2000). /Imágenes del silencio/. Barcelona: Anagrama.

Balló, Jordi, Bergala, Alain (Eds.) (2016). /Motivos visuales del cine./ Barcelona: Galaxia Gutenberg.

Balló, Jordi, Salvadó, Alan (2023). /El poder en escena. Motivos visuales en la esfera pública/. Barcelona: Galaxia Gutenberg.

Farocki, Harun (2013). /Desconfiar de las imágenes/. Buenos Aires: Caja Negra.

Ginzburg, Carlo (2015). /Paura, reverenza, terrore. Cinque saggi di iconografia politica/. Milan: Adelphi.

Mondzain, Marie-José (1996). /Image, icône, économie: les sources byzantines de l’imaginaire contemporain/. Paris: Seuil.

Panofsky, Erwin (1982). /Estudios sobre iconología/. Madrid: Alianza.

Steyerl, Hito (2014). /Los condenados de la pantalla/. Buenos Aires: Caja Negra.

Warburg, Aby (2010). /Atlas Mnemosyne/. Madrid: Akal.

For any inquiries related to this special issue, please contact us via email at: *(mumovep /at/ upf.edu) <mailto:(mumovep /at/ upf.edu)>*


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