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[Commlist] CFP: “Flying Through the Capitalocene: Hollywood, Aviation and Climate Breakdown" Alphaville: Journal of Film and Screen Media
Mon Oct 06 22:42:00 GMT 2025
*Call for Papers*
*/Alphaville: Journal of Film and Screen Media/*
*“Flying Through the Capitalocene: Hollywood, Aviation and Climate*
*Breakdown”*
*Editor: Dr Aidan Power (University of Exeter)*
*
*
The histories of American cinema and flight go largely hand in hand,
with less than a decade separating the first film screenings and the
Wright Brothers’ first successful flight in 1903. Both technologies have
long been emblematic of human progress, take people on journeys,
diminish distances, and are defiantly modern in scope, yet both meet
with a reckoning when confronted with climate breakdown, as the
industries that sustain them are forced to justify their outsized carbon
footprints. This issue of /Alphaville: Journal of Film and Screen Media
/posits that from a vantage point high in a plane we can glimpse the
breadth of modern US history, one recorded on-screen by an everdutiful
Hollywood culture industry.
Aerial cinematography, which first appeared in /Wilbur Wright and His
Flying Machine/ (1909) would revolutionise human perspective and play a
significant role in two world wars, while a 1927 recording of Charles
Lindbergh’s inaugural transatlantic flight to Paris was one of the very
first sound films. That same year /Wings/—a celebration of US air power
directed by a World War I pilot (William A. Wellman)—won Best Picture at
the inaugural Academy Awards. A generation of flight films extolled
American exceptionalism during the Second World War, the Cold War, and
latterly the space race, while another era still sought to make sense of
the nation both before and after 9/11. Nor has this relationship cooled:
as recently as 2022, /Top Gun: Maverick/ was widely credited with saving
a Covid-hit film industry, while simultaneously raising all kinds of
questions about the carbon output of both aviation and film production,
as well as the US Military’s continued influence over Hollywood output.
And yet curiously, while academic studies of aviation and cinema exist,
none perhaps having had more impact than Paul Virilio’s /War and Cinema:
The Logistics of Perception/, scholarship has been slow to place this
relationship within the wider contexts of climate breakdown, a gap that
this issue seeks to address.
There is a certain synchronicity at play when we consider /Top Gun/’s
links with the US military, for Virilio’s work helps shed light on the
ways that the film industry’s vertical reorientation arose in large part
due to the same military’s need for aerial surveillance during the First
World War. In fact, the connection goes back further still, with Luke
McKernan raising the possibility that the Wright brothers never filmed
their inaugural flight because they wanted to sell their secret
invention to the US military. An unintended consequence of their
decision, however, as Kevin L. Ferguson notes, was that it made it even
harder for the world to believe such a feat were possible, and it should
not surprise us therefore, that from there on out, the presence of
filmmakers at major aviation events was considered crucial. In turn, as
Robert Wohl points out, director/pilots including Wellman, and latterly
Howard Hawks and Howard Hughes soon after popularised the aviation film
within Hollywood itself.
While environmental scholars remain divided over when the
Anthropocene—the human-made epoch in which we unequally reside—began, we
could, should we so choose, date its Great Acceleration to a precise
date: 16 July 1945, when the first atomic explosion was carried out by
the US army as part of the Manhattan Project in the New Mexico desert.
Or perhaps fast forward a month, and consider the events of 6 August
1945, when the US Airforce dropped the first atomic bomb from the Enola
Gay on Hiroshima, instantly killing 70,000 people. From this vantage
point at least, it all began, and was filmed from a plane. It follows
then that all the time an alternative history was being constructed in
plain sight, one where the omnipresent spectre of onscreen flight
naturalised contemporaneous discourses and inadvertently prefigured an
environmentally degraded future. Such is in keeping with Jennifer Fay’s
pioneering work on cinema history and climate breakdown, which argues
that cinema estranges us from our conception of the world and in so
doing is, and always has been, the aesthetic practice of the
Anthropocene. The entire history of Hollywood it follows can be seen as
an inadvertent documenter of the deleterious impact of human activity on
the planet. As the cultural wing of US capital moreover, it can be seen
more profitably still as documenter of the Capitalocene, a term with
origins in the work of Andreas Malm and Jason Moore. Descriptions
matter, as Moore reminds us in "Anthropocene or Capitalocene? Nature,
History, and the Crisis of Capitalism", when observing that while “the
Anthropocene sounds the alarm […] it cannot explain how these alarming
changes came about”. As a whole host of scholars have pointed out, the
climate crisis accordingly necessitates a ruthless reinterrogation of
history, as well as of the assumptions that underpin conceptualisations
of historical progress. An aim of this issue therefore is to consider
American cinema in its entirety from pre-Hollywood to the current day.
Planes are useful for sharpening the focus of what is potentially
unwieldy subject matter, not least because they provide a readily
identifiable symbol of the planetary phenomenon/hyperobject that is the
climate crisis, while also serving as microcosmic spaces for modelling
behaviours and systems of control, most obviously when it comes to
segregating passengers by class, race, or gender.
In material terms, some 120 years after the Wright Brothers first took
flight, aviation, like Hollywood itself, remains a defiantly modernist
phenomenon that shapes our everyday lives, one that, despite piecemeal
attempts to mitigate its carbon impact, contributes hugely to planetary
breakdown. Returning to this history and uncovering alternate histories
then remains hugely important, as for example, Paula Amad’s
deconstruction of modernist masculinist myths in the article “Affective
Cinaereality: Women and Aviation in Silent Cinema” reminds us. Moreover,
as Farai Chipato and David Chandler note with a nod to Donna Haraway, in
their recent monograph /Race in the Anthropocene: Coloniality, Disavowal
and the Black Horizon/, “taking the world-making ontological violence of
coloniality into account means ‘staying with the trouble’ of modernity
rather than wishing modernity away or hoping that alternative worlds can
be conjured from within this one”. Doing so opens up possibilities too,
not least if we conceptually broaden the scope of flight itself, and
take into account, for example, Michelle D. Commander’s observation in
/Afro-Atlantic Flight: Speculative Returns and the Black Fantastic/,
that “flight is transcendence over one’s reality—an escape predicated on
imagination and the incessant longing to be free”.
Flight moreover has always been an intensely cinematic event; witness to
give but some examples the fall of Saigon, the Hindenburg disaster, or
Amelia Earhart landing in Southampton. Crucially, such high-profile
instances of flight are also intensely dialectical, serving as sites of
hope and fear that emphasise gaps between mobility and stasis, private
and public, and coloniser and colonised that crystallise hegemonic
assumptions at key moments in human history, assumptions that everywhere
are being resuscitated, respawned, regurgitated and ultimately,
reinforced in an epoch where large tracts of the earth are becoming
uninhabitable, and flight in all its manifestations becomes ever more
stratified.
We see it in the ghoulish spectacle of a planeful of dogs being
evacuated from Kabul airport, while below helpless Afghans look on. We
observe it in celebrity vanity flights into orbit funded by billionaire
robber barons, whose carbon footprints outstrip those of entire nations.
Or, most gruesomely, we see it play out in the US-funded Israeli
genocide of the Palestinian people, a death from above that seeks to
destroy a whole population while scorching the very earth that sustains
them in a simultaneous act of ecocide. That such barbarism could happen
in plain sight should horrify us, but it should not surprise us, for the
inability or outright refusal of Western media to present the world as
it really is has long been obvious.
As the cultural wing of US hegemony, Hollywood, which literally
enshrined white supremacy into its production code, has, with some
notable exceptions, historically towed the line. Again, returning to the
air is clarifying. Exemplary is the opening scene of /Raiders of the
Lost Ark/, where archaeologist/thief Indiana Jones steals a native
artefact from a Peruvian temple before fleeing an enraged local tribe in
a float plane. As the rising aircraft belches fumes into the air, its
famous passenger’s mobility is juxtaposed against the natives’ stasis,
his technological mastery trumping their primitive spears. The resultant
and by now iconic superimposition of a map over a shot of the plane
flying through clouds follows, a visual leitmotif that reinforces Jones’
mastery of the air and by proxy naturalises both US hegemony and the
white supremacist tenets that America and Hollywood were built upon, and
that are today everywhere evident in interrelated neofascist clampdowns
on civil rights protests and climate activism. In such contexts it
follows that flight, and who has access to it, will become more than
ever a matter of life and death.
Returning to the sky, this issue of Alphaville will seek to make
explicit such connections and unpack interrelated histories of flight,
Hollywood, and climate breakdown. In so doing, it aims to consider not
only how such histories shape our present moment, but also explore how
they might offer salutary lessons for, and potentially modes of
resistance to, the turbulent futures that lie in store.
*Potential topics could include (but are by no means restricted to):*
The interconnected histories of flight and Hollywood
Early cinema, flight and environmental degradation
The US Military Complex, Hollywood, flight and climate breakdown
Genocide and Ecocide from above: How the culture industry defends the
indefensible
Drones and resistance: disrupting supply chains in the Capitalocene
Intersections between film and aviation industries
From Airplane! to Con Air to Snakes on a Plan to Zero Hour. Rethinking
genre in the Capitalocene
Dromology, flight, and compressed time in the Capitalocene
Technological advancements in aerial cinematography and shooting a
burning planet
White flight and the privatisation of space
Evacuation: Saigon, Kabul, and Hollywood cultural memory
Onscreen aviation labour practices and organising as mode of resistance
Ecofeminist resistance and cinematic flight
Race, flight, resistance: from Tulsa to Oakland
“Get off my plane!” Revisiting 1990s flight narratives in the era of
climate breakdown
*Publication Details*
*If you are interested in contributing to this issue, please send a
300-word abstract along with a brief biography to Aidan Power
((a.power3 /at/ exeter.ac.uk)) by November 10^th 2025*
*
*
Full-length articles: 5,500-7,000 words, including notes but excluding
references
Video essay: Approx. 3–15 mins, plus accompanying text 500–1,000 words
Articles and video essays will be subject to full peer review.
Guidelines here: https://www.alphavillejournal.com/Guidelines.html
*
*
*
*
*Abstracts Due:* 10 November 2025
*Acceptance Notifications:* 20 November 2025
*Full Articles Due:* 15 May 2026
Alphaville is a non-profit diamond open-access journal, and it requests
no fee from authors or readers.
Visit us at https://www.alphavillejournal.com
/
/
Dr Aidan Power
Lecturer in Film and Television
University of Exeter
he/him
/
/
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