CFP Dossier Imago. Studi di cinema e media, n. 19, I semestre 2019
Narrazioni postcoloniali della contemporaneità, tra conflitto e convivenza
Postcolonial Narratives of the Present, between Conflict and Coexistence
Call for Papers (PDF)
Si prega di inviare le proposte (200 parole), corredate da una breve biografia dell’autore/autrice, entro il 1° novembre 2018.
I testi, corredati da un abstract in inglese di massimo 500 caratteri e da 5 parole chiave, dovranno essere recapitati entro il 10 febbraio 2019 ai seguenti indirizzi: leonardo.defranceschi@uniroma3.it e farah.polato@unipd.it. La loro lunghezza dovrà essere compresa fra i 30.000 e i 40.000 caratteri, spazi inclusi. Le norme redazionali sono consultabili al link https://www.bulzoni.it/it/riviste/imago-studi-di-cinema-e-media.
Literature and film generate symbolic as well as economic capital. As such, aesthetic productions exist in various contexts following contrasting rules. Which role(s) do authors and filmmakers play in positioning themselves in this conflictive relation?
Bringing together fourteen essays by scholars from Germany, the USA, the UK and France, this volume examines the multiple ways in which the progressive (self-) fashioning of authors and filmmakers interacts with the public sphere, generating authorial postures, and thus arouses attention. It questions the autonomous nature of the artistic creation and highlights the parallels and differences between the more or less clear-cut national contexts, in order to elucidate the complexity of authorship from a multifaceted perspective, combining contributions from literary and cultural studies, as well as film, media, and communication studies.
Dealing with Authorship, as a transversal venture, brings together reflections on leading critics, exploring works and postures of canonical and non-canonical authors and filmmakers. An uncommon and challenging picture of authorship is explored here, across national and international artistic fields that affect Africa, Europe and America. The volume raises the questions of cultural linkages between South and North, imbalances between the mainstream and the margins in an economic, literary or “racial” dimension, and, more broadly, the relation of power and agency between artists, editors, critics, publics, media and markets.