The
questions of memory and representations of conflicts are deeply rooted in the
cinematic and artistic practices of Arab countries: Lebanese cinema always
questions its civil war, since it started in 1975, exploring until today its
consequences in a troubled national and regional socio-political context;
Egyptian cinema, despite censorship and the alignment of the industry on
political regimes, reveals in different ways societal and geopolitical upset;
Palestinian cinema tries to document a presence, a proof of the existence of a
people, but also to identify a fleeing space-time context and identity…
During the
last decade, and following the recent events in the Arab world and the
political and social turmoil that followed, from Tunisia to Syria via Lebanon,
Egypt, Libya or Palestinian territories, the works questioning those conflicts
have gotten in a way under the limelight: filmmakers, documentarians, video
artists or photographers are constantly solicited to be the witnesses of a
period considered to be a turning point in the destiny of these countries. But
the question that remains is the following: what profound and enduring
upheavals those events caused in the cinematic and artistic practices of the
countries in question?
By taking
into consideration the cinemas and the visual practices of Lebanon and Arab
countries, we will try to formulate our problematic based on certain questions:
in modern and contemporary history, what representation(s) these artists
offered of their native societies? And what place do Film, video and visual
arts in general occupy in the cultural and social life of the aforementioned
countries?
Also,
through an overview of contemporary visual practices, of their production and
national, regional and international exploitation, we will try to apprehend the
limits, the potential and the challenges of these practices, and to surmise
their capacity to account for the history and actuality of the Arab countries.
This call
for papers has the objective to: suggest possible new research axes regarding
contemporary artistic practices; to account for the links between the Film
community, the different artistic communities and the political and civil
milieu; to discuss the different means used by filmmakers and artists to
represent past or current conflicts.
The main
axes of research covered by this issue are the following (non-exhaustive list):
- Representations of conflicts in Arab cinemas (Lebanon, Egypt, Iraq, Syria, Tunisia, Palestinian territories…).
- The persistence of conflict fall-outs in the face of amnesia and deliberate occultation.
- The work of Female Filmmakers, and their predominant role in certain national cinemas, specifically Lebanon.
- The relation between filmmakers and national production structures on one hand and political regimes in place on the other (Lebanon, Egypt, Algeria, Morocco, Syria…)
- The contradictory memories of wars.
- The ‘Arab springs’ seen from Europe: cinematic and media exchanges and relations between Arab countries and European countries.
- Exchanges between Arab cinemas and other artistic practices (Literature, music, graphic arts…)
The contributors must submit their text in one of the following languages: French, English or Arabic. They must send it to the following electronic address: regards@usj.edu.lb
Before
September 30 2018
The mail
must include :
- The title of the article
- The abstract (1000 signs maximum, with spaces).
- Keywords.
- A bio-bibliography (500-750 signs, with spaces).
- The article (35000 signs maximum, with spaces)
The journal
has an editorial committee, a reading committee, as well as a scientific
committee nominated for three years. The first scientific committee is as
follows :
Elie
Yazbek, PR associé (IESAV, Université Saint-Joseph de Beyrouth, Liban –
président du comité scientifique)
Ghada Sayegh,
MCF (IESAV, Université Saint-Joseph de Beyrouth, Liban)
Toufic
El-Khoury, MCF (IESAV, Université Saint-Joseph de Beyrouth, Liban)
Karl Akiki,
MCF (Université Saint-Joseph de Beyrouth, Liban)
Jacqueline
Nacache, PR (Université Paris Diderot – Paris 7, France)
José Moure,
PR (Université Paris Panthéon Sorbonne – Paris 1, France)
Fabien
Boully, MCF (Université Paris Nanterre, France)
André
Habib, PR (Université de Montréal, Canada)
Dalia
Mostafa, Assistant PR (University of Manchester, Angleterre)
Hamid
Aidouni, PR (Université Abdelmalek Essaadi, Maroc)
Editor-in-chief
: Joseph Korkmaz, PR (Université Saint-Joseph de Beyrouth, Liban)
Bibliography
(indicative)
ARMES, Roy
(2010). Arab Filmmakers of the Middle East: a Dictionary, Bloomington, Indiana
University Press., 194 pages.
BEAUGÉ,
Gilbert & CLÉMENT, Jean-François (dir.) (1995). L’Image dans le monde
arabe, Paris, CNRS, 322 pages.
BOEX,
Cécile, « Être cinéaste syrien », in Itinéraires esthétiques et scènes
culturelles au Proche-Orient. In MERMIER Franck & PUIG Nicolas, Beyrouth,
Presses de l’Ifpo, 2007, p. 175-201.
DABASHI,
Hamid (2006). Dreams of a Nation: on Palestinian cinema, Verso, London, 213
pages.
DEVICTOR,
Agnès (dir.), Cinémas arabes du 21ème siècle : nouveaux territoires, nouveaux
enjeux, Aix-en-Provence, Revue des Mondes Musulmans et de la Méditerranée,
2013.
DONNEZ-COLIN,
Gönül (dir.) (2007). The Cinema of North Africa and the Middle East, Waliflower
Press, London, 292 pages.
GERTZ,
Nurith & KHLEIFI, George (2008). Palestinian Cinema: Landscape, Trauma and
Memory, Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh, 224 pages.
KHATIB,
Lina (2008). Lebanese Cinema: Imagining the civil war and Beyond, IB Tauris,
New York, 214 pages.
KHATIB,
Lina (2006). Filming the Modern Middle East: politics in the cinemas of
Hollywood and the Arab World, I.B. Tauris, London, 242 pages.
KHAYATI,
Khemaïs (1996). Cinémas arabes : topographie d’une image éclatée, L’Harmattan,
Paris, 247 pages.
SALTI,
Rasha (2006). Insights into Syrian Cinema, Rattapala Press, New York, 189
pages.
Yazbek
Elie, Regards sur le cinéma libanais 1990-2010, Paris, L’Harmattan, 2012, 78
pages.
Contact
Info:
Toufic
El-Khoury
Maître de
conférences
Coordinateur
pédagogique (Masters / Doctorats)
Tél.: 01
421 000 Ext.: 5357
Contact
Email: regards@usj.edu.lb
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