This
collection seeks 4,000-6,000 word chapters on cinema and liberation theology
for an edited collection which a major academic publisher is interested in.
This
collection focuses on liberation narratives which are in some way related to or
inspired by religious traditions/literatures/practices/discourses from around
the world. The films and analyses need not be explicitly religious in content,
but need only to be argued in the context of liberation with theology,
spirituality, or divinity.
Chapters
that focus on one or more of the following will be considered with priority:
James Cone, Daniel M. Bell Jr., S. Brent Plate and Antonio Sison.
Alternatively, Chapters which deal with the cinematic apparatus and theological/religious
correlates are also encouraged.
Although
authors are invited to propose their own topics, here are a few suggestions:
- Cinema and Transcendence: how may the cinema be used toward liberatory ends either culturally, or socially? Can cinema, like many religious narratives, suspend oppressive regimes of thought and modulate spatial, social, political relations?
- Jacques Ranciere claims that the cinema presents a unique merger of the image and the flesh, “the image made flesh.” How might Ranciere’s idea apply to a specific film or cluster of films? How might the revelatory potential of film inspire transcendence?
- The Birth of a Nation (2016) and Black Liberation Theology: How might Nate Parker’s recent remake demonstrate the emerging discourse of liberation into cinema in general, and/or African American cinema in particular?
- Lars Von Trier and Divinity: although Von Trier is not a politically motivated director, how might his films - specifically those with religious or religious-inspired narratives such as Breaking the Waves - rethink and reimagine liberation in terms of sexuality and divinity?
- Cinema and Sacred Space: how does the cinematic apparatus change the way sacred spaces function, or the way we perceive sacred space?
- How might cinema enable us to rethink resurrection narratives? For instance, Ryan Coogler’s debut film Fruitvale Station (2013) depicts the last day in the life of Oscar Grant, who was murdered by Transit Police in San Francisco in 2009. Although Grant was killed, the film cinematically resurrects him through images at the end of the film.
Authors are
encouraged to write on any cinematic and religious tradition without cultural,
ethnic, or regional boundaries. Perspectives on theology, cinema, ontology,
history and historiography, psychoanalytic theory, postcolonial studies, Third
Cinema, and queer theory, are also encouraged.
Please
submit a 300-400 word abstract along with a tentative title. Please send a CV
or a brief biography along with your abstracts by October 15, 2018. Authors
will be informed by mid November whether or not their proposals have been
selected. First Drafts will be due around mid January, although this deadline
is a bit flexible.
Please send
submission materials in word or pdf format to tonyjballas@gmail.com.
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