*Character as character: understanding and appreciating people in films* Abstracts (300 words with 50 word biographical note) for twenty-minute papers are invited on any aspects of the theme “character as character in film” for a one-day symposium at the University of Bristol, UK on *Saturday 13th October 2018* organised by Dr. Dominic Lash (Bristol) and Dr. Hoi Lun Law (independent researcher). Confirmed keynote: Dr. Benedict Morrison (University of Exeter, UK) In 1966, John Bayley – reviewing W.J. Harvey’s *Character and the Novel* – could write that ‘[c]onsidering its historical importance… it is odd that there have been so few attempts by critical theorists to analyse what we mean by ‘character’.’ With regard to film it is surprising that something similar could still be said in 2018, perhaps partly because of the understandable desire of film scholars to step out from the shadows cast by the older artform. Despite occasional exceptions, most studies of character in film have been oriented around issues such as identification and affect. This symposium will, instead, focus on what value there might be in attempting to study characters as characters; characters, rather than spectators, are its object. What is a film character, how do we understand them, and how might we best appreciate the achievements that successful film characters represent? We hope that this will take us in a multitude of directions: whether towards criticism, film aesthetics, ontology, epistemology, or elsewhere. Subjects might include, but are not limited to: - What is a film character? What goes into making one? What makes a character specifically filmic, besides simply appearing in a film? - Studies of characters in individual movies, including reassessments of pre-existing discussions of particular film characters. - The relationship between film characters and stylistic features (editing, framing, lighting, costume, set-design, cinematography, voiceover, point-of-view…). - What are film characters like? Traits, tropes, and types. - How do characters relate to narratives, and vice-versa? Is story a vehicle for character, or the other way around? - Physical character(istics): bodies, voices, faces, gestures, movements. - Character and characters: interactions between characters, whether in one film or across several. - Performing characters: casting, performance, the relationship between character and performer. - Star characters: investigating the relationship between our understanding of stars and the characters they portray. - Evaluating characters: examining character construction as filmic achievement. - Non-human characters: animals, robots, computers, monsters, aliens, dragons, unicorns… Please email abstracts (or any questions) to [log in to unmask] by *Friday 3rd August 2018* https://characterascharacter.wordpress.com/ ---- Screen-L is sponsored by the Telecommunication & Film Dept., the University of Alabama: http://www.tcf.ua.edu