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August 2011, Week 1

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From:
Angelica Fenner <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Film and TV Studies Discussion List <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Mon, 1 Aug 2011 12:31:57 -0400
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Proposed Panel for SCMS Annual Conference 

March 21-25, 2012, Boston Massachusetts, 

Summary

Despite the emerging interest in the relationship between religion and cinema and filmic portrayals of relgion, the buddhist tradition has long remained underthematized within the cinema and within film scholarship. This may have to do with the general tendency for this spiritual practice to be individual, private, and grounded in meditation and inward contemplation. This buddhist cultivatation of inner vision, contemplation, and the void contrasts dramatically with the cinema's overall association with voyeurism, alternation between spectacle and action, and (generally speaking) the material world. Nevertheless, ever since the Dalai Llama was driven into exile, international awareness of and curiosity about this ascetic spiritual practice continues to blossom. Buddhist practices have, for example, been incorporated into new age subcultures, where they have also been subjected to commercialization and commodification. The Dalai Llama himself has become increasingly politically active and outspoken, hereby breaking with specific traditions of pacifism and seclusion. This panel takes stock of the emerging relationship between Buddhism and cinema, and invites philosophical, film theoretical, phenomenological, or spiritual approaches to this emerging relationship. Papers could address Buddhist themes adopted in screenplays for feature film production, or documentaries exploring some facet of buddhism, or the implementation of zen principles in filmmaking. Please submit a 250-300 word abstract with a five-item bibliography and a brief author bio to [log in to unmask] by Tuesday, August 9th.

Angelica Fenner
Associate Professor
German & Cinema Studies
Innis College, 2 Sussex Avenue
University of Toronto
Toronto, ON M5S 1J5





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