Showing posts with label philosophy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label philosophy. Show all posts

New Issue of CINEMA Journal of Philosophy and the Moving Image

Monday, January 5, 2015

Jeff Walls photograph A Sudden Gust of Wind (after Hokusai), 1993 (courtesy of Wikipedia)

Today, in its continuing series of catch up posts on new offerings from open access film e-journals, Film Studies For Free brings you links to the contents of the latest issue of Cinema: Journal of Philosophy and the Moving Image.

Of particular interest, this time, are Tom McClellands clear-eyed account of the respects in which the medium of film and the discipline of philosophy can intersect, Agustín Zarzosas detailed evaluation of Rancière’s criticism of Deleuze, and Temenuga Trifonovas terrific discussion of the ways in which contemporary photography, like that of Jeff Wall mentioned above, seeks to reclaim the cinematic within the photographic from within the twilight of indexicality.

Cinema: Journal of Philosophy and the Moving Image, No. 2 (2011)

Abstracts and Contributors

Articles
Interview
  • Questions for Jacques Rancière around his book Les écarts du cinéma (English version and French version): Conducted by Susana Nascimento Duarte
Conference Report
In Portuguese: 
Translation
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Cinema Journal of Philosophy and the Moving Image

Sunday, December 28, 2014

Image from Possession (Andrzej Żuławski, 1981). Read Patricia MacCormacks article on the film here.
Film Studies For Free is delighted to pass on news of the launch of Cinema: Journal of Philosophy and the Moving Image. You can find the table of contents for its inaugural issue and links to all article PDFs below

Cinema: Journal of Philosophy and the Moving Image is a refereed publication published online by the Philosophy of Language Institute of the Faculty of Social and Human Sciences of the New University of Lisbon. The journal publishes original essays and critical articles, reviews, conference reports and interviews, and releases original art work in the field of philosophical inquiry into cinema. The term “cinema” is here taken in its broadest sense as moving image (and image that moves). Historically, cinema studies have centered on film, but with the digitization and proliferation of new means of production and distribution have also studied video, television and new media. This deep engagement with cinematic culture, so understood, can provide tools for a better understanding of contemporary visual culture. Cinema is particularly interested in philosophical approaches to the aesthetics of the moving image as well as in philosophical investigations on particular works and about the contexts in which these works are seen and produced. It accepts submissions in Portuguese, English, French, and Spanish and it offers free access to its content.

Cinema aims at:

• disseminating philosophical investigations into cinema in the broadest sense, that is, including video, television, and new media;
• promoting the link between Portuguese and international scientific communities that develop work simultaneously within the fields of cinema studies and philosophy;
• providing a platform for a fruitful dialogue between various approaches, particular methodologies, topics and interdisciplinary contributions, within the scope of the journal.
The make up of the international editorial team bespeaks the very high quality of this new journal. And the star-studded line-up for its first issue, together with its extraordinarily interesting table of contents, shows just how thrilling those all too unusual analytic philosophy and continental philosophy juxtapositions can be!

FSFF really looks forward to reading more, and sincerely wishes CJPMI the very best for a long and always openly accessible life!

Issue 1 (December 2010) 

Contents: 

Editorial 

ARTICLES 

INTERVIEWS 

CONFERENCE REPORTS 

CFP for Issue 2 here.


CINEMA: JOURNAL OF PHILOSOPHY AND THE MOVING IMAGE
Patrícia Silveirinha Castello Branco, editor
Sérgio Dias Branco, associate editor
Susana Viegas, associate editor
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New Film Philosophy Haneke Rivette Cassavetes Deleuze Badiou Leigh Bacon Jarman Bu�uel and more

Saturday, December 27, 2014

Frame capture from Happy-Go-Lucky (Mike Leigh, 2008). Read Basileios Kroustalliss take on this film as a thought-experiment

Film Studies For Free is delighted to relay the excellent news that another high-quality  issue of Film-Philosophy has just been published. Edited by David Sorfa, Graham Matthews, Matthew Holtmeier and Ben Tyrer, the issue boasts no fewer than thirteen great articles as well as dozens of book reviews. The former are listed in full and linked to below.

The next annual Film-Philosophy conference will take place in London in September 2012, and the full schedule has recently been published. You can find it here.

Film-Philosophy also has its very own Facebook page and Twitter account.


Film-Philosophy, Vol 16, No 1 (2012)

Articles

  1. Interpreting Disturbed Minds: Donald Davidson and The White Ribbon PDF by James J Pearson
  2. Haptic Aurality: Resonance, Listening and Michael Haneke PDF by Lisa Coulthard
  3. To Describe a Labyrinth: Dialectics in Jacques Rivette’s Film Theory and Film Practice PDF by Douglas Morrey
  4. The Subject Trapped in Gomorrah: Undecidability and Choice in Network Cinema PDF by Maria Poulaki
  5. Film as Thought Experiment: A Happy-Go-Lucky Case? PDF by Basileios Kroustallis
  6. Losing Face: Francis Bacons 25th Hour PDF by Arne De Boever
  7. Charm and Strangeness: The Aesthetic and Epistemic Dimensions of Derek Jarman’s Wittgenstein PDF by Kieran Anthony Cashell
  8. Why He Really Doesn’t Get Her: Deleuze’s Whatever-Space and the Crisis of the Male Quest PDF by Niels Niessen
  9. Groundhog Day and the Good Life PDF by Diana Abad
  10. Remystifying Film: Aesthetics, Emotion and The Queen PDF by Stella Hockenhull
  11. Contrapuntal Close-up: The Cinema of John Cassavetes and the Agitation of Sense PDF by Daniele Rugo
  12. Of Bastard Man and Evil Woman, or, the Horror of Sex PDF by Lorenzo Chiesa
  13. Perversity and Post-Marxian Thought in Buñuel’s Late Films PDF by Chad Trevitte
Book reviews
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