SCREEN-L Archives

July 2002, Week 1

SCREEN-L@LISTSERV.UA.EDU

Options: Use Monospaced Font
Show Text Part by Default
Show All Mail Headers

Message: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Topic: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Author: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]

Print Reply
Subject:
From:
Chris Horak <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Film and TV Studies Discussion List <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Wed, 3 Jul 2002 20:25:01 EDT
Content-Type:
text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (66 lines)
Close Readings: Symposium on Amateur Films
Saturday, July 27 and Sunday, July 28
Contact: Dwight Swanson at 207 469-0924.

Intimate records on film offer a road map to understanding the past and its
connection to the present in Close Readings: Seeing Amateur Films in
Important Ways at Northeast Historic Film, the moving image archives in
Bucksport, Maine, July 27 and 28.
Aimed at anyone interested in home movies and their cultural significance,
the symposium will be moderated by Mark Neumann and Rick Prelinger. Among
presenters will be filmmaker and home movie expert Jeffrey Ruoff, Film &
Television Studies, Dartmouth College, editor of the current "Travelogues and
Travel Films," issue of Visual Anthropology.
    Rick Prelinger, of Prelinger Archives in San Francisco, a proponent of
public access to cultural resources, will talk about the potential the
Internet offers film archives and their users. Prelinger Archives, which has
the world's largest privately held collection of 20th-century American
advertising, educational, industrial and amateur films, is already doing it
with 995 titles through a partnership with the Internet Moving Images Archive
(www.archive.org). The films are playable on PCs equipped with the
appropriate hardware and software.
    In his presentation, "Amateur Film, Copyright and New Media," Prelinger
will talk about why giving up total control of access benefits archives in
the long run. Through its arrangement, Prelinger Archives has mounted its
material online at little cost, received immeasurable free publicity, and
formed beneficial business relationships.
    Martha McNamara, University of Maine historian, will present
"Investigating Authenticity," a look at the interpretation of moving images.
McNamara asks her Maine history students to compare From Stump to Ship, a
film about logging practices shot for the Machias Lumber Company in 1930, and
Woodsmen and River Drivers, a 1985 documentary featuring interviews with many
of the men who appear in the earlier movie. The later film includes a woman's
voice in the mill's former bookkeeper, as well as perspective of some
contemporary loggers.
                                             MOREā€¦
 
Close Readings: Symposium on Amateur Films
                                                                      2


Student opinions on which film tells a more compelling story about early 20th
century always vary, and that is the point. "My students' lives are
completely saturated with moving images," McNamara says. "I want to teach a
basic visual literacy. They need to be able to apply to these moving images
the skills most of us bring to reading. I want them to ask, who made this
image and why? What was their goal? What are they trying to convince me to
believe?"
    Barbara Greenstone, Technology Literacy Integrator at Mt. Ararat Middle
School in Topsham, Maine, will explore how students can use moving images to
gain to a deeper understanding of their community's past and present. "These
kids took videos apart and really had to think about what the footage meant,"
Greenstone said. "It was much more meaningful than if they had just watched a
movie." Her presentation is in the context of Maine's commitment to supply a
laptop computer (with video editing software installed) for each 7th and 8th
grader.
Lunch is provided for Symposium registrants Saturday and Sunday. The cost for
the program is $50 for two days; includes coffee breaks, lunches, welcome &
screening of From Stump to Ship: A 1930 Logging Film on Friday, July 26 at
4:30. p.m. A printable registration form is available on the Northeast
Historic Film website, www.oldfilm.org, or call 207 469-0924. The program is
supported in part by a grant from the Maine Humanities Council.

----
Screen-L is sponsored by the Telecommunication & Film Dept., the
University of Alabama: http://www.tcf.ua.edu

ATOM RSS1 RSS2