A special issue of Popular Communication: The International Journal of Media and Culture: Patrick Burkart and Christian Christensen,
co-Editors-in-Chief. Edited by Danial Humphrey (Texas A&M University) and
Hamish Ford (University of Newcastle, Australia)
We seek scholarly essays from that represent and reflect on the
genuinely international response to Ingmar Bergman’s cinema over seven decades.
Until now, most of the very substantial amount of academic work devoted to the
director in English or via translation has offered perspectives from
Scandinavia, North America, Britain, and to some degree France. Yet since the
1950s Bergman has elicited substantial critical and scholarly interest,
passionate viewership, and influence on filmmakers in the wider world, to a
much more extensive degree than other European ‘art cinema’ figures. Such
longstanding interest belies oft-heard clichés and critiques insisting
Bergman's films are of interest primarily to privileged Western audiences. It
is our intention to shine a light on the genuine, remarkably global nature of
these films’ reception.
This project takes some initial, “touchstone” inspiration from the fact
that gay, leftist African-American novelist James Baldwin wrote of being
profoundly moved by Bergman’s cinema, identifying resonance between what many
assume to be irreconcilably different cultural contexts. In the present day, it
has become apparent to us through both social media activity and more scholarly
and cinephile online forums that critics and film lovers from Africa, India,
Asia, Latin America, and beyond have had a longstanding fascination with
Bergman’s films. Yet the old canard insisting they are of limited interest
outside a presumptively white, upper-middle class West-European and North
American audience remains.
We are asking for essays of between 4,000 and 7,000 words, written in or
translated into English while emanating from diverse cultural origins and
perspectives, approaching Bergman’s work with a view to its historical and
ongoing global significance. We encourage the analysis and situating of the
films via a range of methodologies and theoretical work spanning recent
humanities disciplines and traditions (including, but not limited to, cultural
studies, post-colonial studies, historiographic approaches, reception studies,
and of course film studies), with a particular eye – as appropriate for this
project – to scholarship devoted to the notion of “world cinema”. Spanning
close analyses of particular films and large-scale studies of this cinema’s
global or extremely localized reception, possible topics may include – but are
not limited to – the following.
Historical accounts of noteworthy critical and/or audience reception of
Bergman’s films in a particular country or region.
Close analysis of one or more films with a view to making cross-cultural
connections.
Positioning Bergman’s work in relation to recent scholarship around the
notion of “world cinema”.
Approaching Bergman’s films in light of debates around cinematic
modernism’s international dimension and/or recent scholarly accounts of global
art cinema.
Bergman’s hitherto unaddressed influence on dramatic and visual artists,
including but not limited to film directors, from non-Western contexts.
Theoretical or historical accounts of global Bergman fan cultures.
Full submissions should be made online at the Popular Communication
website, where instructions
for authors are also located. The deadline for submission of completed essays
of between 4,000 and 7,000 words in length is June 1, 2019 for an anticipated
2020 publication.
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