As 2019
marks the 20th anniversary of Stanley Kubrick’s death, his influence on
contemporary cinema keeps intensifying. Steven Spielberg recently paid homage
to The Shining (1980) in his film Ready Player One (2018) when Damien Chazelle
referenced 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) in First Man (2018). Meanwhile Yorgos
Lanthimos’s The Killing of a Sacred Deer (2017) and The Favourite (2018)
clearly follow the footsteps of Eyes Wide Shut (1999) and Barry Lyndon (1975)
respectively. Kubrick’s legacy looms over the 21st Century and fascinates
artists and scholars alike, as the many studies dedicated to his work, from his
passing to this day, can testify.
While at
the time of their release his films were often misunderstood and undervalued,
Kubrick is today considered as an unequaled visionary and auteur. In the
preface to Michel Ciment’s seminal book on the filmmaker (Kubrick, 2003),
Martin Scorsese writes: “[…] with each new film, he redefined the medium and
its possibilities.” From his first feature film Fear and Desire (1953) to his
last (Eyes Wide Shut), Kubrick directed thirteen feature films, all in
different genres, from the epic (Spartacus, 1960) to the war film (Paths of
Glory, 1957; Full Metal Jacket, 1987), while also taking on science-fiction
(2001: A Space Odyssey) and the horror genre (The Shining, 1980). And yet,
however separate and distinct Kubrick’s films can seem – both in scale and
aesthetics –, their themes, obsessions, and directing interweave thus
establishing a self-reflective and thought provoking thread throughout his
entire filmography.
This
anthology seeks previously unpublished essays that explore Stanley Kubrick’s
body of work. We are particularly interested in interdisciplinary approaches
that can illuminate the various aspects of the director’s work and visual
style. This volume will undertake to address the entirety of his work. Essays
exploring Kubrick’s photographs as well as his unrealized projects will also be
considered. As this volume will be peer-reviewed and scholarly, chapters are to
be written at a high academic level.
Contributions
could include – but are not limited to – the following topics:
- Old Hollywood and classicism
- Film genres (film noir, the epic, etc.)
- The Fantastic
- Collaboration with Kirk Douglas
- Collaboration with Peter Sellers
- Photography and cinematography
- Color patterns
- Shapes and symmetry
- Sets and architecture
- 18th Century Art
- Sound and use of music
- War and rebellion
- Satire, black humor and caricature
- Evil and crime
- Eros and Thanatos
- Passion and reason
- Sex and sexual violence
- Depiction of the family unit (marriage and children)
- Masks
- Nihilism
- Misanthropy
- The unconscious, dreams and nightmares
- Madness
- Morality and transgression
- Representations of masculinity and femininity
- The perception of time (intra and extra-diegetic)
- Philosophical approaches
This
anthology will be organized into thematic sections around these topics and
others that emerge from submissions. We are open to works that focus on other
topics as well and authors interested in pursuing other related lines of
inquiry. Feel free to contact the editor with any questions you may have about
the project and please share this announcement with colleagues whose work
aligns with the focus of this volume.
Submit a
300-500 word abstract of your proposed chapter contribution, a brief CV and
complete contact information to Elsa Colombani (colombani.elsa@hotmail.fr) by
March 29, 2019. Full chapters of 5,000-6,000 words will likely be due in late
July after signing a contract with the publisher (we expect this to be a volume
in the ongoing Critical Companion to Popular Directors series edited by Adam
Barkman and Antonio Sanna and published with Lexington Books at Rowman & Littlefield).
Note:
Acceptance of a proposed abstract does not guarantee the acceptance of the full
chapter into the completed volume.
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