skip to main | skip to sidebar
  • Home
  • About
  • Contact

sport people

Tampilkan postingan dengan label 1970s Film Theory. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label 1970s Film Theory. Tampilkan semua postingan

Home » Posts filed under 1970s Film Theory

So That You Can Live: In Memory of Paul Willemen

Diposting oleh good reading on Senin, 21 Mei 2012

Updated August 6, 2012




If I were to claim one single main achievement for Framework, it would be this: the journal was among the quickest to recognize the need, and to argue, for the elaboration of a transnational critical-theoretical discourse, which would leave no 'existing' frame of reference undisturbed. [Paul Willemen] 
In a 1994 dialogue with Noel King, Paul Willemen noted that in the varied body of critical writings associated with cinephilia there exists a recurring preoccupation with an element of the cinematic experience 'which resists, which escapes existing networks of critical discourse and theoretical frameworks' ([Looks and Frictions: Essays in Cultural Studies and Film Theory] 1994: 231). Willemen and King locate this resistant element specifically in the cinephile's characteristic 'fetishising of a particular moment, the isolating of a crystallisingly expressive detail' in the film image (1994: 227). That is, what persists in these cinephilic discourses is a preoccupation or fascination with what the various writers 'perceive to be the privileged, pleasure-giving, fascinating moment of a relationship to what's happening on screen' in the form of 'the capturing of fleeting, evanescent moments' (1994: 232). Whether it is the gesture of a hand, the odd rhythm of a horse's gait, or the sudden change of expression on a face, these moments are experienced by the viewer who encounters them as nothing less than a revelation. [Christian Keathley, 'The Cinephiliac Moment', Framework, 42, 200]
The concept of 'double outsideness' in the work of a displaced film-maker is articulated in essays on Sirk and Ophuls, while the essay 'An Avant-Garde for the 90s' usefully connects Willemen's early work in film studies to his later preoccupation with non-Euro-American cinema.
Overall his work challenges dominant preconceptions about cinema and its attendant critical discourses, and makes itself available for broader application. Looks and Frictions is by no means an easy or comfortable read, but in its reminder to the critic to consider their own position in relation to the objects of criticism, and of the need to ground criticism in the real, to fit social and historical circumstances and determinants into even the most esoteric flights of theoretical fancy, it is both productive and provocative and deserves to be widely read. [Ben Goldsmith, 'To Be Outside and In-Between: On Paul Willemen, Looks and Frictions: Essays in Cultural Studies and Film Theory', Film-Philosophy, 2.1, 1998]

Film Studies For Free was saddened by the crushing news of the death, just over a week ago, of Paul Willemen, the brilliant and hugely influential film theorist, critic, programmer, historian and, above all, activist.

Willemen started work at the British Film Institute in the early 1970s, and was part of the editorial group of Screen in the second part of that decade. In 1976, he became involved with the journal Framework, which had been founded two years earlier by Donald Ranvaud, Sheila Whitaker, and others at Warwick University. He took over as its editor in 1982, handing over that role fully to Jim Pines between 1986 and 1989.

Working as a BFI employee with film museums and cinemateques,  he collaborated over many years with the Edinburgh Film Festival. In 1986, in that festival's 40th anniversary year, he, Pines and June Givanni organised a famous "Third Cinema" conference. Questions of Third Cinema, the landmark volume that resulted from the conference, co-edited by Pines and Willemen, was in part a transcription of contributions that importantly explored the "cinema of diasporic subjects living and working in the metropolitan centres of London, Paris, New York" (p. vii) as well as elsewhere. As well as one of Framework's principal contributors over the years, he was also author and editor of many other important books, pamphlets, and articles on cinema. Some of these are pictured or named above, and more are listed, passim, below. 

Having dropped out of his Belgian university in 1960 ('And I never went back'), Willemen's first proper experience of working in a higher educational context was a three month trip in 1980 to Griffith University in Brisbane, Australia, where he participated in many groundbreaking seminars on cinema and film theory. In the late 1990s, he was Professor of Critical Studies at Napier University in Edinburgh, and from 1999 until his retirement in 2008 he was Research Professor of Media Studies at the University of Ulster. 


In memory of Paul Willemen and his contributions to Film Studies, Film Studies For Free is very honoured to present, below, some wonderful, fitting tributes to him and his work by four people who knew and worked with him over the years: Adrian Martin, Lesley Stern, Martin McLoone and Michael Chanan. Thanks very much to each of them for their words.

Below their tributes are FSFF's customary links to online publications of Willemen's writing and to discussions of his work.

It is appropriate on such occasions to wish that the person who has just died will rest in peace. After his struggles with illness in recent times, especially, FSFF certainly wishes that for Paul Willemen. But to honour his inspirational contribution to our field properly, those of us who work in his wake -- on cinephilia, on comparative film studies, on film and politics -- need more than ever to take up his passionate restlessness, even as it would impossible, or undesirable, to embrace every one of his personal stances or attitudes. He will always be in our memory. We will forever be in his debt.


Indelible Memories of Paul Willemen
Paul Willemen is sometimes off-handedly regarded, by those who haven’t looked at his work terribly closely, as someone who was (and remained) part of a horde of ‘Screen theorists’ emerging in the 1970s, single-mindedly dedicated to enforcing the shotgun marriage of Lacan, Althusser, Barthes and Derrida within the then institutionally burgeoning field of cinema studies in the UK. In fact, Paul always followed a very singular path, and he was fiercely critical of many of the developments and tendencies around him.

His distinctive contribution begins, in my opinion, with the early meditation (published in 1974) on the concept of inner speech in cinema, via the theories of Boris Eikhenbaum. It was a concept he was to return to again and again, in key articles of 1981 (“Cinematic Discourse – The Problem of Inner Speech”) and 1995 (“Regimes of Subjectivity and Looking” [The UTS Review 1(2)). What was inner speech all about? Fundamentally, a doubling: images arise (in the mind, and on screen) with words attached, encoded in their veritable DNA; no image exists in some pure realm of visual expressivity or imagination, but rather is always-already enmeshed in what Paul would refer to ‘webs of meaning’, threads of social discourse.

Beyond being a specific trope, I believe inner speech served as a sort of figure or metaphor for Paul, and for his way of thinking. Nothing (certainly no film text) was ever pristine for him, everything was produced in an intersection of forces, lines, influences and contexts; each person, each action, each object was the result of a ‘subject formation’ that needed to be grasped and explicated. But, as determining as such a subject-grid could be, it also – as in the always unstable interplay of images and inner speech – provided a space for interference, short-circuiting, and thus for internal modulation and change.

Paul had little faith in the movement known as cultural studies as it emerged in the 1980s, and even less in its almost religious invocation of ‘popular resistance’; but he did believe in the hopeful force of desire (starting with the desire for cinema itself, cinephilia), and in its constant process of mobilisation – a mobilisation that had to occur not just in writing and teaching about film, but also in editing and publishing (his years at the helm of Framework, and with various BFI book and DVD projects), in the programming and presenting of work (the film culture of organisations and festivals), and in active, collaborative relations with real filmmakers (and Paul knew many, from Stephen Dwoskin to Amos Gitai).

Over the last 15 years of his life, Paul sketched out, in various places, an ambitious program for a ‘comparative film studies’ of world cinema; these pieces need to be collected in a book now, because they constitute a theory – and a critical-pedagogical practice – that we sorely need. Paul was someone who (as the saying goes) didn’t suffer fools lightly, and he made a polemical show of denigrating most forms of sloppy, sentimental humanism; but his politics was of a truly passionate kind, and its core was summed up in the title of a film that he championed: So That You Can Live.

Adrian Martin
Associate Professor, Arts
Monash University (also see: Adrian Martin, 'The Front', Filmkrant, August 2012)

Beguiled. I was beguiled by Willemen. The first film we ever discussed (or argued about) was Don Seigel’s The Beguiled, a baroque Freudian parable in which Clint Eastwood plays a Confederate soldier who has his leg cut off by a group of demented Southern women. It was 1975 and I had just scored a job as assistant publicity officer in the Regional Film Theatres Dept at the BFI. Soon after I arrived Paul Willemen came in as boss of the section. I knew who he was, had earnestly devoured the Edinburgh Film festival publications, and gobbled up all the film theory emerging at that time. I was enthralled by the distant figures who populated the stage: Peter Wollen and Laura Mulvey, Sam Rohdie, Stephen Heath, Claire Johnston and Paul Willemen among others. Willemen was the most mysterious and attractive to me: striding or lounging or soapboxing, in his leather jacket and boots he seemed to me a sort of European intellectual Marlon Brandon.

At the BFI he ignored me. I mainly did filing, boring boring, but occasionally was allowed to write capsule reviews. Then one day, doing his job, he read my few words on The Beguiled and instigated an interrogation. It was terrifying. It was just a measly little paragraph but I had to defend it as though it really mattered, as though every word mattered. I had never been challenged about film like this. But it was also exhilarating. And I learnt a few things about Paul: for him the intellectual stakes were always high, no matter what the context, no matter who the interlocutor; he had a cinephiliac taste for the baroque and trashy; he had a droll sardonic sense of humour which was integral to his critical modus; for all his association with high theory he was also a pragmatist, clear-sighted about what working in cultural institutions was about.

Within a few months I had moved to Australia, but over the years and across continents—meeting at conferences and festivals and bookshops—Paul and I became friends. We also fell pretty much out of contact in the last fifteen years or so. When I heard that he had died, an unexpected and terrible grief roared into the world. And a sense of loss. Of something lost from the world. Not just the person called Paul Willemen, but what he stood for. For many people. For someone with a not undeserved reputation for being cantankerous, aggressive, acrimonious, polemical, scornful, contemptuous he had a huge network of friends across the world. How come? And what would they all say? Very different things I imagine (many of his friends would probably not be inclined to talk to one another) so it is disingenuous to try and conjure into being a sense of PW through a few personal memories and encounters. But that is what I have, and how I can do it, and I hope that this question (of his irascibility combined with sociality) though submerged in what follows, will rise to the surface.

Two scenarios, two extended exchanges: one taking place in the context of Framework, the other in BFI publishing.

In the first half of the 1980s I was working on experimental Japanese cinema and spending time in Japan (living in Australia), and Paul was editing Framework. He cajoled me into writing up some of my material for the journal. This was at a time when I had left the academy and was very disenchanted with academic writing in general, screenese in particular; I also found the experience of being in Japan, of researching the various strands of experimentation from the sixties through to the contemporary scene, hyper stimulating but also culturally very difficult. I did not know how to write about it, how to find a language that was true to the history, that was informative for people who had no familiarity with these films and their cultural location, but that nevertheless somehow eschewed the anaemia of a disaffected third person voice.

To some extent I saw Paul as the enemy here (a representative of screenese). But Paul liked to have enemies, and I liked the Framework project. Paul’s own account of the emergence and early history of the journal is on the Framework web site, but let me just say how significant the Framework intervention was and remains today, indeed how it is differentiated from much of today’s euphoric babble about the global, about world cinema. Although Framework was coherently dedicated to giving voice to, to researching, and unearthing voices, films, figures from outside the contemporary Euro-American mainstream it was remarkably eclectic and heterodox. Not only in the range of materials (interviews, archival documents, industry figures, theory, criticism, history, bibliographies, filmographies) but in modes of writing, modes of address.

Throughout the years Paul was tenaciously committed to theorizing national cinemas and the concept of the national (instantiated in Theorizing National Cinema, the book he edited with Valentina Vitali) but he was also militantly opposed to institutionalized theory, to a professionalization of film studies which was totally ungrounded, lacking in historical research, untethered from political perspective and meaningful critical engagement. He practiced this precept in his own engagement in a variety of forums—film festival events and publications, involvement in various alternative cinema campaigns, writing encyclopaedias (on horror films for instance, and a monumental work on Indian cinema), collaborating on writing monographs and editing collections, and publishing. He was always curious about location, audience, address, and about how to write differently for different contexts and in order to make different kinds of interventions.

So Paul patiently listened to me going on about Japan and the impossibility of writing about it. Interjected questions. Never patronized, never accused me of self-indulgence and preciousness. Simply assumed I would get it done. So I did. As editor he was dealing with lots of writers, not to mention filmmakers and others. From different places, different cultural formations. Making new friends, keeping up old feuds. And with all these balls in the air he had this fabulous capacity to give attention, to focus energy, to shape discursive threads and formulate a critique out of discontinuous and fragmented social entities.

Some time after that, though the timeline is hazy for me now, Paul solicited and eventually rescued my Scorsese project from oblivion. He was a great editor, never dodging an argument, never imposing a point of view (even though we argued), but also never reluctant to cut my wordiness. I derived much pleasure from trying on occasion to outfox him by writing some sections that I knew he wouldn’t much like in such a way that he would find it impossible to cut. Sometimes it worked.

I will be eternally grateful to Paul, first of all for suggesting Scorsese as a topic (for seeing something that I myself could not see), and secondly for publishing The Scorsese Connection. I cannot imagine where else I could have taken the project at that time. It did not adhere to any of the familiar protocols of academic publishing in Britain or the U.S. But his gesture is symptomatic more generally of his work as both a publisher and cultural activist, often forging pathways and opening up viewing and reading parameters, inflecting the conception of cultural production through frictional in-between spaces.

Paul’s own book Looks and Frictions was part of the same “Perspectives” series. In her introduction Meaghan Morris suggests thinking of Willemen as “a thoroughly pragmatic utopian.” One aspect of that utopian pragmatism (to invert the terms) is manifested in the number of collaborators Willemen has had; the way his name is linked with other names on major books and projects for instance (Claire Johnston, Ashish Rajadhyaksha, Jim Pines, Valentina Vitali to name a few) suggests a pragmatic approach to cultural production as joint work, involving provisional alliances, and assumed intellectual and political negotiations. The utopian dimension was socialist, not always in easily recognizable terms, but always concerned with intervention and underpinned by the belief that all transformative aspirations need to be two-way, to arise out of knowledge and analysis.
And then it came about that I fell out of contact with PW so I cannot speak of recent years. Eventually we had a very long and fierce and exhausting argument, as I remember it about affect and performance and cinephilia (his exchange with Noel King about cinephilia in Looks and Frictions, incidentally, is a pleasurable read and a truly collaborative intellectual working-through). In martialling his ammunition Paul showed me Ghatak’s Meghe Dhaka Tara (Cloud-CappedStar), which was a revelation. But we were each intransigent. We parted with affection on that occasion but somehow our exchange had run its course, and we never really connected again. Hearing of his death I felt overwhelming regret at losing touch. But then I remembered that Paul was the least sentimental of beings. I remembered being beguiled. I remembered many things about PW and his work that I do not want to forget. His dire dystopic warnings—just as much as the utopian pragmatism—seem pertinent today. It is timely to be reminded that the intellectual stakes should be high.
Lesley Stern
Professor, Visual Arts Department,
University of California at San Diego

Paul Willemen embraced academic life relatively late, arriving at the University of Ulster at Coleraine in 1999 after a short spell at Napier in Edinburgh. His reputation and standing within academic film studies was, of course, formidable by this stage. He had played a key role in the 1970s and 1980s in defining the subject area in the UK and helping to shape and mould both the subject’s theoretical terrain and its institutional structures. These earlier years were characterised by his dual commitment to promoting a ‘cinephiliac’ understanding of popular cinema – especially mainstream American cinema – and to promoting an understanding of alternative cinema in all its formal and political diversity.

In his years at Ulster, he pursued two further theoretical obsessions – the concept of comparative film studies and the pleasures of and political contexts of the action film, especially in its heroic classical mode. He entertained a rapt audience at Ulster during his professorial lecture by showing some muscle-bound examples of the genre and offering a political and economic critique of the Italian peplum tradition. He was also vexed and intrigued by the concept of national cinema and his dissatisfaction with the ‘national’ was the spur to his interest in comparative film studies. Ulster provided him with an incongruous but strangely apt environment to pursue this interest.

He was also very generous with his time. When my own study of Irish cinema was published in 2000, he attended a launch event in Dublin on the Monday evening and deposited a three-page critique of the book in my pigeonhole at Coleraine on the Friday morning. He pointed out the theoretical shortcomings of the book and spotted an ambiguity at its centre as well as offering a reasoned and wholly professional critique. He was, of course, spot on as usual and it was the measure of his erudition and insight that I was neither annoyed nor dismayed by his critique. He was right. And since I knew well that Paul did not suffer fools, as he saw them, gladly I was also flattered by the attention. This is what made him, despite his formidable intelligence and learning, popular with students as well. He took the time to take them seriously.

Paul was not an institutional person and he always found the workings of bureaucracy draining and straining and in the end, I think he found the University system counter-intuitive to his conception of learning and thinking. He was, however, a good colleague and friend and when he retired in 2008 I certainly missed having his intellectual engagement around the place. I assumed that he would continue to write and teach in retirement, operating with the relative freedom of the independent scholar. It is extremely sad that his illness and early death has deprived us of one of the most accomplished and challenging intellects in our field.

Martin McLoone
Prof. of Media Studies,
University of Ulster

Sad to hear of the death of Paul Willemen. I didn't know him well; our relationship was that of professional colleagues. And I often disagreed with him. But he was a splendid intellectual interlocutor. I recall in particular a summer afternoon in Italy in the early 1980s where we coincided at the Pesaro film festival. Pesaro had come into its own in the late 60s as perhaps the most radical of Europe's film festivals, and among other things, a place to see new films from Latin America, of which there were several that year. Simply meeting there was a sign of certain shared values about film and politics. We wandered off between two screenings to eat ice cream and got stuck into an argument that I've never forgotten, about artistic languages, in which he fiercely defended a Lacanian position that I couldn't accept because I didn't think it worked for music. I came to the conclusion that Paul didn't have a musical ear, but also that I needed to try and grapple with Lacan (something I only did many years later).

I have another indelible memory of Paul from the end of the 90s. I had run into problems at the college where I was then teaching. In those early years of New Labour, a new non-academic Dean had been appointed on the promise of bringing contacts with industry. She quickly proved a disaster who thought that academic committees were like the rubber-stamping variety she'd known at the BBC, whence she came. For various reasons too complicated to rake over, I was the poor sod who got scapegoated with a specious disciplinary charge that the institution was subsequently forced to withdraw on legal advice. But not before a large number of friends and colleagues had written emails to the Head of College in my support. The very first to write, in an exemplary demonstration of solidarity, was Paul, who, in a few elegant but trenchant lines, charged the college with infringement of academic freedom. His was a principled voice of a kind that we urgently need more of today, and I'm glad at least of the opportunity to pay tribute to him here.

Michael Chanan
Professor of Film
Department of Media, Culture and Language
University of Roehampton, London
Putney Debater website

Paul Willemen's work online
  • Paul Willemen, 'An Introduction to Framework', Framework, 42, 1999
  • Paul Willemen, 'On Framework', Framework,  (date unknown)
  • Paul Willemen (interviewed by Deane Williams), 'The Double Access, Film Culture and the Ossification of Film Studies', Screening the Past, 23, 2008 (scroll down)
  • Paul Willemen, 'Note on Dancer in the Dark', Framework, 42, 1999 (scroll down)
  • Paul Willemen, '[Obituary] Eduardo Guedes [of Cinema Action]: His creative energy widened recognition of the independent film-maker's art', The Guardian, October 17, 2000
 Other online discussions of Willemen's work and influence:
  • Acquarello, 'Questions of Third Cinema edited by Jim Pines and Paul Willemen', Strictly Film School, March 12, 2008
  • Homi Bhabha, 'The Commitment to Theory', new formations 5, Summer 1988
  • Jean-Loup Bourget, 'Sirk and the Critics', Bright Lights Film Journal, 48, 2005 (originally published in Issue 6, 1977)
  • Jeremy B. Butler, 'Imitation of Life (John Stahl, 1934. Douglas Sirk, 1959): Style and the domestic melodrama', from Jump Cut, no. 32, April 1987, pp. 25-28
  • Michael Chanan, 'The Changing Geography of Third Cinema', Screen Special Latin American Issue (edited by Catherine Grant and Jackie Stacey), Volume 38 number 4 Winter 1997
  • Ben Goldsmith, 'To Be Outside and In-Between: On Paul Willemen, Looks and Frictions: Essays in Cultural Studies and Film Theory', Film-Philosophy, 2.1, 1998]
  • Lynne Joyrich, 'Written on the Screen: Mediation and Immersion in Far from Heaven', originally published in Camera Obscura, 54, Volume 18, Number, 2003
  • Christian Keathley, 'The Cinephiliac Moment', Framework, Issue 42, 2000
  • Amy Lawrence, 'The Face of a Saint', The Passion of Montgomery Clift (University of California Press, 2010)
  • André de Alencar Lyon, 'The Afterlife of Melodrama: Roger Michell's Changing Lanes', SURJ., Spring 2004
  • New Adrian Martin, 'The Front', Filmkrant, August 2012 
  • Tom O'Regan (interviewed by Deane Williams), ‘The Circulation of Ideas’, Screening the Past, 26, 2009
  • Ryan Powell, 'Putting on the Red Dress: Performative Camp in Douglas Sirk's All That Heaven Allows,' Forum, Issue 4, Spring 2007
  • Niall Richardson, 'Poison in the Sirkian System: The Political Agenda of Todd Haynes's Far From Heaven', Scope, Issue 6, October 2006
  • Peter Stanfield, 'Notes Toward a History of the Edinburgh International Film Festival, 1969–77', Film International, Issue 34, 2008 
  • Lesley Stern (interviewed by Deane Williams), ‘I’m going to be met by a phalanx of safari-suited men’, Screening the Past, 28, 2010
More about → So That You Can Live: In Memory of Paul Willemen
di 03.38 { Add komentar }
Label: 1970s Film Theory, Adrian Martin, BFI, Cinephilia, comparative film studies, film and politics, film theory, FSFF tributes, Lesley Stern, Martin McLoone, Michael Chanan, Paul Willemen, photogenie, World cinema

New Todd Haynes' Masterclass

Diposting oleh good reading on Minggu, 27 November 2011

Todd Haynes' masterclass given on November 12, 2011, on the occasion of a retrospective of his films at the XIIth Queer Film Festival MEZIPATRA in Prague. Coproduced by MEZIPATRA, MIDPOINT and FAMU. Todd Haynes speaks about all his films with the Variety critic Boyd Van Hoeij.

Film Studies For Free heard about the above, enjoyable and hugely insightful video thanks to San Francisco based film critic Michael Guillén.

FSFF has a longstanding soft spot for Haynes, a great filmmaker whose work has a compelling relationship with film theory, as well as with Film Studies as a discipline, as the above video indicates time and again.

Interested readers can find earlier FSFF entries on Haynes (with links to lots of online studies of his works) here and here, and also on queer film theory here.
More about → New Todd Haynes' Masterclass
di 04.45 { Add komentar }
Label: 1970s Film Theory, film and politics, film festivals, independent cinema, queer cinema, queer film theory, queer films, semiotics, Todd haynes

Permanent Seminar on the Histories of Film Theory

Diposting oleh good reading on Sabtu, 12 November 2011

Picture of Sergei Eisenstein, pioneering Soviet film director and theorist

Thanks to Michał Oleszczyk, Film Studies For Free found out about a truly fascinating, and highly promising, project: the Permanent Seminar on the Histories of Film Theory.

The Seminar is
an open network of film scholars interested in rediscovering and re-reading historical contributions and debates on film. Special attention is devoted to early writings on cinema, as well as more recent reconsiderations of film's role in the new media landscape. The Permanent Seminar is affiliated with the Film Theory in Media History book series published through the Amsterdam University Press.
The very high quality of the project is guaranteed by its coordinators -- Jane Gaines (Columbia University) and Francesco Casetti (Yale University & University of Milan) --  as well as by its scientific board: Dudley Andrew (Yale University); Chris Berry (University of London-Goldsmiths); André Gaudreault (University of Montréal); Vinzenz Hediger (University of Bochum); John McKay (Yale University); Markus Nornes (University of Michigan); David Rodowick (Harvard University); Philip Rosen (Brown University); Leonardo Quaresima (University of Udine); Maria “Masha” Salazkina (Concordia University, Montréal); and Petr Szczepanik (University of Brno).

There's not much up on the website yet as the project has just begun, but FSFF recommends that its readers take a look and then keep on going back for further film-theoretical delights of the kind linked to below.
  • Sergei Eisenstein, "Forthcoming] "Unpublished “Notes for a General History of Cinema” – New York, 2010
  • Francesco Orestano, "Motion Pictures and Scholastic Education" (Italy, 1914)
  • Giovanni Papini, "Philosophical Observations on the Motion Picture" (Italy, 1907)
  • Mario Ponzo, "Certain Psychological Observations Made During Motion Picture Screenings" (Italy, 1911)
  • Emilio Scaglione, "Motion Pictures in Provincial Towns" (Italy, 1916)
  • Enrico Thovez, "The Art of Celluloid" (Italy, 1908)
  • Giuseppe d’Abundo, "Concerning the Effects of Film Viewing on Neurotic Individuals" (Italy, 1911)
More about → Permanent Seminar on the Histories of Film Theory
di 06.41 { Add komentar }
Label: 1970s Film Theory, film pedagogy, film philosophy, film psychology, Sergei Eisenstein

Articles from the New Review of Film and Television Studies

Diposting oleh good reading on Senin, 19 September 2011

Images from The Story of Adèle H. (François Truffaut, 1975) and The Piano (Jane Campion, 1993) - two films referred to in Agustín Zarzosa's article 'Jane Campion's The Piano: melodrama as mode of exchange'
Film Studies For Free was very happy to hear that the excellent journal New Review of Film and Television Studies is now offering free access to a great selection of essays, including a recent offering by Thomas Elsaesser on Avatar, and translations from Christian Metz's book Impersonal Enunciation.

As well as the marvellous aforementioned items, FSFF also highly recommends the articles by Mette Kramer and Agustín Zarzosa.

All freely accessible material is linked to below. 
  • Cinema and the two cultures: Robert Lepage's La face cachée de la lune by Sylvie Bissonnette
  • Introduction to Christian Metz's Impersonal Enunciation, or the Place of Film by Cormac Deane
  • James Cameron's Avatar: access for all by Thomas Elsaesser
  • The embrace of Mother Nature: appraisal processes and the regulation of affect in attachment genres by Mette Kramer
  • Impersonal Enunciation, or the Place of Film (extracts) by Christian Metz and Translated by Cormac Deane
  • A lightning-image of the kaleidoscope: a review of Päsi Valiaho's Mapping the Moving Image by Imola Mikó
  • The narrative structuring and interactive narrative logic of televised professional wrestling by Aaron J. Petten
  • Review of Jeremy G. Butler, Television Style by Barry Salt
  • Jane Campion's The Piano: melodrama as mode of exchange by Agustin Zarzosa
More about → Articles from the New Review of Film and Television Studies
di 10.54 { Add komentar }
Label: 1970s Film Theory, Avatar, Canadian Cinema, Christian Metz, cinematic affect, film theory, François Truffaut, Hollywood, James Cameron, Jane Campion, melodrama, Robert Lepage, Sport

New SCOPE: Chris Marker, Cult cinema, Dance on Film, 1970s Film Theory

Diposting oleh good reading on Senin, 27 Juni 2011

Image from The Company (Robert Altman, 2003)

Today, Film Studies For Free is thrilled to point you in the tremendous direction of the latest contents of Scope: An Online Journal of Film and Television Studies. There's lots to recommend in this issue but FSFF particularly enjoyed Katharina Lindner's article on the female dancer on film, along with numerous, wonderful book reviews and conference reports, all part of the fabulous and openly accessible service that Scope provides to the international film studies community.

Scope, Issue 20, June 211

Articles

  • Pasts and Futures of 1970s Film Theory Matthew Croombs
  • Cultivating the Cult Experience at the Alamo Drafthouse Cinema Donna de Ville
  • Spectacular (Dis-) Embodiments: The Female Dancer on Film  Katharina Lindner
  • Chris Marker and the Audiovisual Archive Oliver Mayer
  • [ALL ARTICLES ON ONE PAGE]

Book Reviews

  • Hollywood Independents: The Postwar Talent Takeover by Denise Mann  
    100 American Independent Films, 2nd edition; The Contemporary Hollywood Reader
      Reviewer: Gareth James
  • Documentary Display: Re-Viewing Nonfiction Film and Video by Keith Beatti Reviewer: Jeffrey Gutierrez
  • Film Festival Yearbook 1: The Festival Circuit by Dina Iordanova with Ragan Rhyne (eds); Dekalog 3: On Film Festivals Reviewer: Linda Hutcheson
  • Mabel Cheung Yuen-Ting's An Autumn's Tale by Stacilee Ford; John Woo's The Killer Reviewer: Lin Feng
  • Responses to Oliver Stone's Alexander: Film, History, and Cultural Studies by Paul Cartledge and Fiona Rose Greenland (eds); Screening Nostalgia: Populuxe Props and Technicolor Aesthetics in Contemporary American Film Reviewer: Andrew B.R. Elliott
  • Research Guide to Japanese Film Studies by Abe Mark Nornes and Aaron Gerow; The South Korean Film Renaissance: Local Hitmakers, Global Provocateurs Reviewer: Jonathan Wroot
  • Chapaev by Julian Graffy; Leni Riefenstahl: A Life Reviewer: Andrei Rogatchevski
  • Harmony and Dissent: Film and Avant-garde Art Movements in the Early Twentieth Century by R. Bruce Elder; Moving Viewers: American Film and the Spectator's Experience Reviewer: Caroline Hagood
  • Reworking the German Past: Adaptations in Film, the Arts, and Popular Culture by Susan G. Figge and Jenifer K. Ward (eds); The Collapse of the Conventional: German Film and Its Politics at the Turn of the Twenty-First Century Reviewer: Matthias Uecker
  • Stellar Encounters: Stardom in Popular European Cinema by Tytti Soila (ed); Claude Rains: An Actor's Voice Reviewer: Rachael Johnson
  • Alternative Film Culture in Inter-War Britain by Jamie Sexton; The Lost World of Cliff Twemlow: The King of Manchester Exploitation Movies; The British 'B' Film Reviewer: Laurence Raw
  • Elia Kazan: The Cinema of an American Outsider by Brian Neve; Cinephilia in the Age of Digital Reproduction: Film, Pleasure and Digital Culture, Volume 1 Reviewer: Mildred Lewis
  • First Person Jewish by Alisa S. Lebow; Neo-Noir Reviewer: Marat Grinberg
  • [ALL BOOK REVIEWS ON ONE PAGE]

Film Reviews

  • Shadows of Progress: Documentary Film in Post-war Britain (1951-1977) Reviewer: Dai Vaughan
  • Bonnie and Clyde Reviewer: Ian Murphy
  • Cracks & Tell-Tale; Robin Hood; The A-Team  Reviewer: Laurence Raw
  • The Karate Kid & The Karate Kid Reviewer: Rachel Mizsei Ward
  • [ALL FILM REVIEWS ON ONE PAGE]

Conference Reports

  • Flow Conference 2010, University of Texas, Austin, 30 September–2 October 2010 Reporter: Kelly K. Ryan and Heather Muse
  • Women's Filmmaking in France 2000-2010, Institut Français, London, 2–4 December 2010 Reporter: Sarah Forgacs
  • MeCCSA Conference: Media, Communication and Cultural Studies Association, University of Salford, 12–14 January 2011 Reporter: Greg Bevan
  • ¡Documentary Now!, University of Westminster, London, 28–30 January 2011 Reporter: Philippa Daniel
  • Rendering the Visible Conference, Georgia State University, 10–14 February 2011 Reporter: Drew Ayers and Steven Pustay
  • Erotic Screen and Sound: Culture, Media and Desire Conference, Griffith University, Brisbane, 15–18 February 2011 Reporter: Michelle A. Mayefske
  • SCMS 2011: Media Citizenship, Society for Cinema and Media Studies, Ritz-Carlton Hotel, New Orleans, 10–13 March 2011 Reporter: Shana MacDonald
  • [ALL CONFERENCE REPORTS ON ONE PAGE]
More about → New SCOPE: Chris Marker, Cult cinema, Dance on Film, 1970s Film Theory
di 01.00 { Add komentar }
Label: 1970s Film Theory, Chris Marker, Cult cinema, dance on film, ejournal, film theory, gender studies, Scope
Postingan Lama Beranda
MEN'S HEALTH

Natural Penis Enlargement Guide
No. 1 Penis Enlargement Guide
Penis Enlargement Bible
Premature ejaculation Solution
Last 20 Minutes Longer Tonight... Guaranteed!
How To Get Keep Rock-Hard Erections
who want to least longer and be better in bed
Cure Psychological Impotence
Natural Penis Enlargement Guide WOMEN'S HEALTH

A Womens-only Program To Help Ladies Lose Fat, Gain Strength And Build Lean & Lovely Physiques
Pregnancy Magnet-a High Converting Offer For A Hungry
Italian Version Of The Bestseller Truth About Cellulite
Cellulite Gone- No Weight Loss No Gym Routine
The Radical Tlc Solution
The Modern Woman’s Guide to Strength Training
Trim Pregnancy - Top Weight Loss Book For Mothers
Ovarian Cyst Miracle
Bacterial Vaginosis Freedom
Ovarian Cyst & PCOS Relief Secrets
Bikini Body Workouts

DIET AND WEIGHT LOSS

Fat Is Not Your Fault
8 Week Lose Weight Fast Academy
A Natural And Nutritious Way To Cleanse Your Body Of Toxins
The Fat Loss Code
7 Secrets To Lose Belly Fat

Entri Populer

  • The Curly Marley Twists: Quickie Post
    Are you following me on Instagram? a lot of stuff that doesn't make the blog ends up on my instagram @naturalbelleoninstagram I post dai...
  • New Post on Eat Move Sleep Blog
    Yesterday, the Dan's Plan blog Eat Move Sleep published a blog post I wrote about sleep, artificial light, your brain, and a free compu...
  • 35 Shots of Claire Denis (and more)
    Image from Vendredi soir (Claire Denis, 2002) Film Studies For Free 's author is excitedly preparing to give a talk at the event ' ...
  • Queer Film and Theory Links In Memory of Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick
    Image from Boys Don't Cry ( Kimberly Peirce , 1999) Film Studies For Free was very sad to hear of the death at 58 of Eve Kosofsky ...
  • The Look: Look Beauty
    Currently loving Look Beauty, the popular weekly magazine launched a make up range exclusively at Superdrug a while back, so of course it is...
  • The OOTD + Turning 30
    I turned 30! I'm still recovering from the ordeal of leaving my 20's but it does feel good to be 30 (sort of) I started to think of ...
  • The Skin Food: Weleda
    If you aren't already a fan of Weleda's Skin Food (£8.89) then you should be. I've been using it for 3 months and I'm obses...
  • spiderman logo vector art – Item 4 | Vector Magz | Free Download
    This Image was ranked 2 by Bing.com for keyword spiderman, You will find this result http://www.bing.com/images/search?q=spiderman&qft=...
  • The Cleanser: Madara EcoFace via Lush Duck
    I'm on a bit of a skincare trip right now, and have spent countless downtime trawling the Internet looking for non toxic, eco friendly p...
  • Great New Product
    Do you feel sad sometimes? Are you tired when you get up in the morning? Do you get winded running sprint intervals? I've just found a...

hi.. enjoy my blog ^_^

Arsip Blog

  • ▼  2014 (18)
    • ▼  Januari (18)
      • The Faux Locs
      • 10 RESOLUTIONS FOR A HEALTHY NEW YEAR
      • Free e-Book and Ideal Weight Program 2.0 Announcement
      • gunnertam | Arsenal fan blog | Page 3
      • Milan AC image et logo animé gratuit pour votre mo...
      • Mad Seeds: Manchester United
      • BagazBMG: BARCELONA
      • search terms juventus logo wallpaper juventus logo...
      • David Beckham Bald Head: Is He Losing His Hair?
      • valentinorossidevanttoureiffelfrance
      • spiderman
      • 1998 Dodge Avenger by Nick
      • Iron Man 3 Wallpaper 1080pHD Wallpapers
      • Quieren a Adele de vuelta en banda sonora del 007 ...
      • Cristiano Ronaldo était à Monaco jeudi. Le Portuga...
      • ronaldo 424831 uludağ sözlük galeri
      • Lionel Messi – the greatest ever? | Harrogate Grammar
      • Cristiano Ronaldo Eu Estou Aqui
  • ►  2013 (1995)
    • ►  Desember (486)
    • ►  November (252)
    • ►  Oktober (268)
    • ►  September (160)
    • ►  Agustus (136)
    • ►  Juli (82)
    • ►  Juni (98)
    • ►  Mei (94)
    • ►  April (105)
    • ►  Maret (116)
    • ►  Februari (105)
    • ►  Januari (93)
  • ►  2012 (1496)
    • ►  Desember (100)
    • ►  November (119)
    • ►  Oktober (104)
    • ►  September (114)
    • ►  Agustus (90)
    • ►  Juli (106)
    • ►  Juni (140)
    • ►  Mei (169)
    • ►  April (174)
    • ►  Maret (133)
    • ►  Februari (127)
    • ►  Januari (120)
  • ►  2011 (1422)
    • ►  Desember (150)
    • ►  November (167)
    • ►  Oktober (153)
    • ►  September (138)
    • ►  Agustus (163)
    • ►  Juli (111)
    • ►  Juni (86)
    • ►  Mei (97)
    • ►  April (106)
    • ►  Maret (102)
    • ►  Februari (76)
    • ►  Januari (73)
  • ►  2010 (793)
    • ►  Desember (63)
    • ►  November (54)
    • ►  Oktober (60)
    • ►  September (67)
    • ►  Agustus (68)
    • ►  Juli (76)
    • ►  Juni (61)
    • ►  Mei (62)
    • ►  April (76)
    • ►  Maret (78)
    • ►  Februari (70)
    • ►  Januari (58)
  • ►  2009 (599)
    • ►  Desember (67)
    • ►  November (64)
    • ►  Oktober (78)
    • ►  September (78)
    • ►  Agustus (80)
    • ►  Juli (81)
    • ►  Juni (19)
    • ►  Mei (32)
    • ►  April (25)
    • ►  Maret (27)
    • ►  Februari (25)
    • ►  Januari (23)
  • ►  2008 (375)
    • ►  Desember (21)
    • ►  November (25)
    • ►  Oktober (31)
    • ►  September (33)
    • ►  Agustus (38)
    • ►  Juli (28)
    • ►  Juni (35)
    • ►  Mei (36)
    • ►  April (33)
    • ►  Maret (39)
    • ►  Februari (30)
    • ►  Januari (26)
  • ►  2007 (345)
    • ►  Desember (26)
    • ►  November (17)
    • ►  Oktober (29)
    • ►  September (21)
    • ►  Agustus (45)
    • ►  Juli (51)
    • ►  Juni (15)
    • ►  Mei (35)
    • ►  April (21)
    • ►  Maret (28)
    • ►  Februari (30)
    • ►  Januari (27)
  • ►  2006 (4)
    • ►  Desember (4)
 

2010 All Rights Reserved sport people.

Wordpress by Chris Pearson - Blogger by Belajar SEO Blogspot