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April 2016, Week 3

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Subject:
From:
Catherine Grant <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Film and TV Studies Discussion List <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Mon, 18 Apr 2016 14:43:21 +0000
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Dear colleagues,

The digital publishing platform REFRAME’s latest round up of open access publications, research website and project launches is published here: http://wp.me/p2GILv-y9. Some details are also given below.


  1.  POST-CINEMA: THEORIZING 21st-CENTURY FILM – a wide-ranging and important open access edited collection, published by REFRAME Books;
  2.  New SEQUENCE on the Analogue-Digital opposition;
  3.  New videos in the TALKS@MFM – Our continuing series of video recordings of research seminars and masterclasses;
  4.  Mediático, Reframing Psychoanalysis, The Audiovisual Essay and Reframing Activism updates.

1. POST-CINEMA: THEORIZING 21st-CENTURY FILM, a major new open access edited collection from REFRAME Books

We are very excited to announce the launch of a major scholarly collection edited by Shane Denson and Julia Leyda, and published by REFRAME’s open access ebook imprint (publisher of THE TABLET BOOK, 2015). If cinema and television, as the dominant media of the 20th century, shaped and reflected our cultural sensibilities, how do new digital media in the 21st century help to shape and reflect new forms of sensibility? In this collection, Denson and Leyda have gathered a range of essays that approach this question by way of a critical engagement with the notion of “post-cinema.” Contributors explore key experiential, technological, political, historical, and ecological aspects of the transition from a cinematic to a post-cinematic media regime and articulate both continuities and disjunctures between film’s first and second centuries.

Contributors include: Caetlin Benson-Allott, Paul Bowman, Felix Brinker, Kristopher L. Cannon, Francesco Casetti, Steen Christiansen, Elena del Río, Rosalind Galt, Therese Grisham, Richard Grusin, Leon Gurevitch, Mark B. N. Hansen, Bruce Isaacs, Adrian Ivakhiv, Kylie Jarrett, Selmin Kara, ​Patricia MacCormack, Lev Manovich, Ruth Mayer, Michael O’Rourke, Patricia Pisters, Alessandra Raengo, David Rambo, Nicholas Rombes, Sergi Sánchez, Karin Mellberg, Steven Shaviro, Michael Loren Siegel, Vivian Sobchack, Billy Stevenson, Andreas Sudmann.

The book appears first in an easily navigable web and mobile browser format from which chapter PDFs may be generated and saved (see the foot of each entry). The collection will shortly appear in a collected PDF edition, followed by EPUB and MOBI formats readable on most e-readers. Online at: http://reframe.sussex.ac.uk/post-cinema/.


2. The latest issue of SEQUENCE: Serial Studies in Media, Film and Music, REFRAME‘s experimental, peer-reviewed, and sequential edited-collection format has been published.

SEQUENCE Four: Analogue-Digital offers its readers, and potential interlocutors, space for reflection on the many forms and techniques of recombinatory media and culture. The inaugural contribution to this issue, and to this topic, is by Paul Atkinson, a specialist in the philosophy of science, media theory and visual culture, based at Monash University in Melbourne. Atkinson’s essay for SEQUENCE (4.1 [2016]) — ‘THINKING WITH DIGITS: Cinema and the Digital-Analogue Opposition’ offers a compelling exploration of what is at stake when we deploy these, now binary terms. He sets out to clarify the representational differences between them, among other distinctions:

It is often pronounced that we live in a digital age and that our social and aesthetic beliefs are underpinned by the concept of digitally. But when a term is used to herald a broad cultural change it loses much of its specificity and critical purpose. The digital becomes a shibboleth of the new and its counterpart, the analogue, a locus for nostalgia and a presumed indexical connection with the real. We are at a point now in the study of media and cinema, when it is important to rethink both the analogue and the digital if they are to continue to have any critical value. This is not a plea to limit discussion to technological affordances, for the terms precede the many recent technologies to which they are applied. Rather it is a call to reconsider the digital-analogue distinction as a mode of representation and how this might apply to cinema. This is not just a matter of providing a clear definition in the manner favored by philosophy, because any theoretical repositioning has to bear some relationship to the material, aesthetic and spectatorial aspects of cinema. The representational differences must affect the way we watch films as well as provide a means for understanding distinct filmmaking practices. In short, it is about redeploying the analogue-digital distinction as a mode of thinking in cinema – in terms of both reason and aesthetics – that extends well beyond the application of specific technologies.



3. TALKS@MFM – REFRAME continues with its series of video and audio recordings of research presentations and master-classes held at the School of Media, Film and Music, University of Sussex.

Including:
· Professor Laura Rascaroli on “Framing: The Essay Film as Theoretical Practice”
· Sanjay Sharma on “#notrascit – Exploring Online Ambient Racism”


4. Mediático, Reframing Psychoanalysis, The Audiovisual Essay and Reframing Activism updates

· AT MEDIÁTICO:
o Peru as a New Site of Authenticity in COOKED and CHELSEA DOES by Niamh Thornton
o An Underground Survivor at the Oscars: Holly Woodlawn, Puerto Rican Actor by Roberto Ortiz
o Alejandro González Iñárritu – A One Day Symposium by Dolores Tierney
o On The Revenant (Alejandro González Iňárritu, 2016) by Dolores Tierney

· AT REFRAMING PSYCHOANALYSIS
o Janet Sayers reviews The Studio: A Psychoanalytic Legacy
o Will Greenshields reviews Transcribing Lacan’s Seminars
o Vicky Lebeau shares her Psychoanalysis and Literature Course Outline
o Will Greenshields’ Speaking Lacanese columns

· AT THE AUDIOVISUAL ESSAY
o Adrian Martin, “A Voice Too Much” Reprint (2016)
o A list of published, open access reflections on audiovisual essays and videographic film and moving image studies by Catherine Grant

· AT REFRAMING ACTIVISM:
o Digital Vigilantiism as Critical Reinforcement of law and order by Daniel Trottier
o The Populist Turn of the 2011 Protest Wave by Paolo Gerbaudo
o Social Movements and Media Technologies by Eleftheria Lekakis

Links to all the above items may be found here: http://wp.me/p2GILv-y9<https://exchange.sussex.ac.uk/owa/14.3.279.2/scripts/premium/redir.aspx?REF=gdHlpnmbAkGkBUrrWb_z9mYj-UZqqQ1AoNfnEu52O5JVBUOVl2fTCAFodHRwOi8vd3AubWUvcDJHSUx2LXk5>.

Best wishes

Dr Catherine Grant
REFRAME Editor,
Part-Time Senior Lecturer in Film Studies
School of Media, Film and Music
University of Sussex
Silverstone Building
Falmer BN1 9RG

E: [log in to unmask]
T: +44 1273 678876

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