Contributions are sought for Film Stock: Histories,
Technologies, Aesthetics, a volume that aims to offer a critical overview of
the history of film stock in its multiple material, technical, social,
political, industrial, and aesthetic dimensions. The scope of the book is
conceived in truly global terms: we particularly welcome contributions that
address non-Western contexts, as well as contributions that work between
national or regional contexts. The book’s focus on film stock as a form of
material culture is animated by a host of recent and emergent trends in the
discipline of film and media studies, and we anticipate that contributions will
critically engage with film stock’s many material components, its ecological
and environmental aspects, its economic and industrial histories, and the
ideological underpinnings of its material and technical bases. We welcome contributions
not only from film scholars but also from archivists, preservationists, and
practitioners; proposals for contributions of various lengths are welcome.
Because this volume aims to be a sourcebook, we seek
contributions that are based in particular historical and industrial contexts,
but also address broader questions pertaining to the materiality of media, the
history of cinema, etc. Essays should explore the production, distribution, and
use of film stock from the 1890s to the present and may address, but are by no
means limited to, the following topics:
- corporate histories of film manufacturers: Fuji, Ilford, Gevaert, Glanzfilm, Ferrania, etc.
- connections between film aesthetics and new film stock technologies
- the impact of sound, color, widescreen, and stereoscopy on film stock manufacturing and processing
- film stock manufacturing processes and components; labor histories of stock manufacturing and processing
- laboratory histories and/or cultures
- the management and control of film stock under different political regimes
- the relationship between film stock and other materials (e.g., plastics) and other industries
- social and cultural histories of film stock addressing issues of representation and identity; e.g., race, ethnicity, gender, etc.
- the effect of new stocks on adjacent technologies such as lighting and make-up
- questions of climate, environment, and travel upon the production and use of stock
- the ecological impacts of film stock (extraction, production, waste)
- the movement of stock between different national contexts comparisons of different stocks: e.g., nitrate and acetate
Please send 500-word abstracts, including an indication of
expected essay length, and short contributor bios to Alice Lovejoy (alovejoy@umn.edu), Kirsty Sinclair Dootson (ksd28@cam.ac.uk) and Pansy Duncan
(p.duncan@massey.ac.nz) by July 30, 2019.
Contributors will be notified in summer 2019, and finished
essays will be due in summer 2020.
Queries may also be addressed to the editors at the above email addresses.
Queries may also be addressed to the editors at the above email addresses.
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