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Erasmus: Screen industries in East-central Europe Conference

Class at Faculty of Arts |
AFV600001

Syllabus

PROGRAM SCHEDULE  

Day 1: Friday, 29 November   13:30 Welcome and Opening Remarks   14:00 Panel 1: (Post)socialist Television

Chair: Petra Hanáková (Charles University, Czech Republic)

Irena Reifová (Charles University, Czech Republic)Limiting the Producer’s Intentions: How Audiences Understood the Political Meanings of Czechoslovak Television Serials during Normalization

Jakub Korda (Palacký University, Czech Republic)The Television Title Sequence as a Tool for the Articulation of Authorship

Sabina Mihelj (Loughborough University, UK)The Working-Class as the Author: Participation, Authority, and Control in Socialist Yugoslavia

Dana Mustata (University of Groningen, Netherlands)Transnational Labour and Programme-Making in Early Romanian Television

Kateryna Khinkulova (Birkbeck College, UK)Authors of Change: Building Up Television’s Identity in Post-Soviet Ukraine against the Backdrop of Russian Presence

Respondent: Petr Szczepanik (Masaryk University, Czech Republic)   16:30 Keynote 1

Chair:Michael N. Goddard (University of Salford, UK)

András Bálint Kovács (Eötvös Loránd University, Hungary) Shot Scale Distribution and Authorship  

Coffee Break   18:15 Panel 2:  Radical Authorship

Chair: Irena Reifová (Charles University, Czech Republic)

Petra Hanáková (Charles University, Czech Republic)Female Authorship and the Feminist Aesthetic in Central European Cinema

Michael N. Goddard (University of Salford, UK)Transgressive Film Authorship across National Borders: The Case of Andrzej Żuławski

Balázs Varga (Eötvös Loránd University, Hungary):Auteurs as Brands: Béla Tarr, his Films, the Critics, and the Audiences

Respondent: Sabina Mihelj (Loughborough University, UK) 20:30 Joint Dinner and Drinks  

Day 2: Saturday, 30 November   09:30 Keynote 2

Chair:Veronika Klusáková (Palacký University, Czech Republic)

Ian Christie (Birkbeck College, UK) "The Past Is a Foreign Country?": (Re)creating Vanished Worlds in European Production Design  

Coffee Break   11:15 Panel 3: Cultural Movements and the Politics of (Trans)nationality

Chair: Marcin Adamczak (Adam Mickiewicz University, Poland)

Francesco Pitassio (Università degli Studi di Udine, Italy)"I Didnʼt Do It!": Authorship, Realism, and Socialism - Italian Neorealism Goes East

Francesco di Chiara (University of Ferrara, Italy)Masters and Rogues: Issues of Authorship in Italian and Yugoslav Film Co-Productions of the 1970s

Constantin Parvulescu (West University of Timisoara, Romania)The Question of Authorship in Socialist-Realist Film

Olof Hedling (Lund University, Sweden)An Authoring Discourse of Sorts: Effects of Public Film Support on a National Cinema

Respondent: Sergei Kapterev (Institute of Cinema Art in Moscow, Russia)   13:15 Lunch   14:45 Panel 4: Group and Institutionalized Authorship

Chair:Francesco Pitassio (Università degli Studi di Udine, Italy)

Sergei Kapterev (Institute of Cinema Art in Moscow, Russia)The Film Career of Mikhail Kalatozov as a Symbiosis of Auteurist Aspirations and Soviet "Corporate" Knowledge

Maria Belodubrovskaya (Wisconsin University, Madison, USA)Plotlessness: Lessons in Soviet Screenwriting

Gabrielle Chomentowski (Sciences Po Paris, France)The Individual against the Collective in the Soviet Cinema Industry: Theory against Practice

Petr Szczepanik (Masaryk University, Czech Republic)Film Units as (Sub)producers: Possibilities of a "House Style" in the State-socialist Mode of Production

Respondent: Constantin Parvulescu (West University of Timisoara, Romania)  

Coffee Break   17:00 Keynote 3

Chair: Petr Szczepanik (Masaryk University, Czech Republic)

Dina Iordanova (University of St. Andrews, UK) Oscars® Little Brothers: Europe and the Politics of Invisibility   19:00 Panel Discussion: Challenges of and opportunities for collaborative research on East and Central European media industries

Chair: Dana Mustata (University of Groningen, Netherlands)   21:00 Reception  

Day 3: Sunday, 1 December   09:30 Panel 5: Trapped in History: Production and Reading of Authorial Style

Chair: Lucie Česálková (Masaryk University, Czech Republic)

Radomír Kokeš (Masaryk University, Czech Republic):Karel Lamač et al: The Classical Style as a Minor Tendency in the Czech Silent Cinema?

Marcin Adamczak (Adam Mickiewicz University, Poland):Surfing on Circumstances: An Author in Socialist State Cinema - The Case of Andrzej Wajda’s Movies in the 1950s

Milan Hain (Palacký University, Czech Republic)Exiled in Hollywood: Hugo Haas and his Independent Production Company

Grażyna Świętochowska (University of Gdańsk, Poland)Into the Machine of the Market: The Way the DVD Covers Speak

Respondent: Miroslaw Przylipiak (University of Gdańsk, Poland)  

Coffee Break   11:15 Panel 6: Political History, Authorship, and Nonfiction

Chair: Balázs Varga (Eötvös Loránd University, Hungary)

Miroslaw Przylipiak (University of Gdańsk, Poland)The Nature of Authorship in Documentary Cinema

Mária Ferenčuhová (Academy of Performing Arts, Slovakia)The Authors Normalized: Slovak Short Documentaries, 1970-73

Lucie Česálková (Masaryk University, Czech Republic):"No Maps, No Lyrics - I am the Director of this Movie": Short Film, Contracts, and Negotiation

Respondent:Francesco Pitassio (Università degli Studi di Udine, Italy)   12:45 Lunch   14:15 Industry Panel: Producers’ Authorship

Chair: Petr Bilík (Palacký University, Czech Republic)  

Annotation

Third Annual SCREEN INDUSTRIES IN EAST-CENTRAL EUROPE CONFERENCE:

INDUSTRIAL AUTHORSHIP 29 November - 1 December 2013, Palacký University, Olomouc, Czech Republic

The Third Annual Screen Industries in East-Central Europe Conference (SIECE) investigates historical and contemporary dimensions of the region’s audiovisual media industries from all angles - local, transnational, economic, cultural, social, and political - and through a broad range of original scholarship delivered in the form of conceptual papers and empirical case-studies.

Conference venues: Palacký University, Centre of Arts, Univerzitní 3, Olomouc.

Conference attendance is free of charge, and the official language is English.

Sponsored by "The Partnership Network of Universities and Film Industry" (FIND), a project funded by the European Social Fund (ESF) via the Czech Ministry of Education, Youth, and Sports - The Education for Competitiveness Operational Programme (ECOP) in collaboration with the Czech Society of Film Studies, Palacký University, and Masaryk University

The Third Annual Screen Industries in East-Central Europe Conference (SIECE) will focus on the broadly defined subject of industrial authorship. In recent times, the concept of the author has become somewhat marginalized in screen studies discourse. Yet, John Caughie has suggested that this figure looms large "everywhere else - in publicity, in journalistic reviews, in television programmes, in film retrospectives, in the marketing of cinema". Caughie goes on to explain that "Sometime around the point at which Film Studies began to be embarrassed by its affiliation to the author, the film industry and its subsidiaries began to discover with renewed enthusiasm the value of authorial branding for both marketing and reputation". The prominent position that authorship occupies across the region’s audiovisual cultures demands investigation in broader, revisionist terms that offload the Romantic notion of the autonomous Auteur in favor of approaches that confront its collectivity and institutional dimensions, and that respect authorship as a phenomenon that can be subject to acts of branding, contestation, appropriation, repurposing, remixing, and so on . As Derek Johnson and Jonathan Gray recently put it: "The author is a node through which discourses of beauty, truth, meaning, and value must travel, while also being a node through which money, power, labor, and the control of culture must travel, and while frequently serving as the mediating figure standing between large organizations (such as Lucasfilm or Fox) and the audience". Building from such a position, the 2013 SIECE Conference will broach questions about the industrial dimensions of authorship, considering how it has become part of the cultural, political, and economic fabric of East-Central Europe.

Further information (incl. Conference Program) will be updated soon.