“We are living in a great epistolary age, even if no one much
acknowledges it. Our phones, by obviating phoning, have reestablished the
omnipresence of text. Think of the sheer profusion of messages … that we now
send. “(Sally Rooney, 2019)
As Irish novelist Sally Rooney observes, despite the frequent assumption
that technological advances provide constantly new forms of communication,
these new forms: the email, the blog, the text message, the tweet, the update
are actually haunted by old ‘epistolary’ forms: the letter and the diary. Both
the letter and the diary have strong historical relationships to privacy,
secrecy and intimacy, as well as to anonymity masquerade and deception, all
notions that are both prevalent and highly contested in our current age. By focusing
on the connection between a wide-range of media and these epistolary forms our
aim is to consider their continuing significance for the mediation of
self-expression and the building of relationships.
On the one hand, in mainstream cinema epistolary forms appear to produce
storytelling that focuses on emotion rather than action, as such, they
challenge the superficiality of post-feminist narratives centered on
consumption and continue the melodramatic tradition, specifically the
protagonist’s “desire to express all… [and] give voice to their deepest
feelings” (Brooks, 1991) (See You’ve Got Mail [1998], Bridget Jones’s Diary
[2001], Sisterhood of the Travelling Pants [2005], The Lake House [2006] P.S I
Love You [2007], The Young Victoria [2009], Julie and Julia [2009], and most
recently, I Love Dick [2016], Love, Simon [2018], and To All The Boys I’ve
Loved Before [2018]). Several films also ask us to consider emotional
masculinity; specifically the relationship between men, vulnerability, and
letter writing ([Dear, John (2010], and Love, Simon 2018], and Charlie in The
Perks of Being a Wallflower 2012]). On the other hand, in the mainstream, we
find masquerade and deceit as the counter to intimacy and emotional expression.
These themes are increasingly prevalent as epistolary forms move online (A
Cinderella Story [2004] as a digital take on a classic, Sierra Burgess Is a Big
Loser, [2018], as the most recent re-telling of Cyrano de Bergerac, and in the
omniscient narration of Gossip Girl [2007-2012]).
In less mainstream film and media letters, diaries, emails, and blogs
have provided ways to play with the space of the personal and
auto-biographical, providing intersections with the Essay Film genre. In this
space epistolary forms offer genres of self-expression that adopt intimate,
emotional, confessional tones; in contrast to the essayistic they are often
characterised by a lack of reflection, as writers are too close to experiences,
unable to make sense of them, writing them in the moment and/or caught up in
the quotidian detail. Hamid Naficy finds epistolary forms particularly
prevalent for expressions of exile ‘driven by distance, separation, absence and
loss’ (Naficy, 1992: 101), (for example, Mona Hatoum’s Measures of Distance
[1988] and Fernando Solanos Tangos: Exile of Gardel [1985]). Naficy’s words fit
Indigenous collectives: the Chiapas media project (for Zapista communities in
Mexico) who have created politicised videos that use ‘letters, interviews and
testimonials’ (Davis et al, 2015: 54) and independents from Chantal Akerman and
Jonas Mekas to Abbas Kiarostami (with Victor Erice).
Beyond cinema, in the art world and other media, it is the themes of
intimacy, privacy self-expression and masquerade raised by letters and diaries
that we find most frequently addressed. Artist Hito Steyerl, writing about
online scamming letters, has gone so far as to argue that: ‘[t]he strongest
affective address of the digital happens in the epistolary mode. As a brush
with words divorced from actual bodies.’(58) Meanwhile visual artists including
Sophie Calle and Miranda July have created subversive melodramatic projects
from their use of letters and diaries.
The goal of this proposed collection is to embark on a deep engagement
with epistolary forms and their presence in culture and on screen. We look
forward to hearing from contributors working on all aspects of film, media and
visual studies who share an interest in the many connections between the
audio-visual and epistolary forms. Contributors may choose to focus on a
specific film or media text or pursue an analysis that draws from a range of
examples. As ‘epistolary forms’ we include letters, diaries, emails, blogs,
texts, tweets and online social media.
Proposals may consider (but should not be limited to) the following
themes and issues:
- Histories of epistolary forms in film and media
- Re-defining self-expression on screen
- Implications for contemporary representations of intimacy
- Relationships with gender & sexuality, especially masculinity
- Intersectionality and epistolary forms
- Centrality to cultures of confession,
- Re-inventions of emotionality
- Extending notions of masquerade
- Relationships with genres (melodrama, romantic comedy, exile cinema, essay film)
- World Cinema/race, ethnicity, the inter-cultural
- Relation to other media forms (television; video games; social media)
- The letter in the digital age (social media; scams)
- Instagram and other social media platforms as diaristic forms
Proposals of up to 350 words, along with a short bio should be sent to
the editors: Catherine.fowler@otago.ac.nz and theterihiggins@gmail.com by
January 10th 2020. Final chapters will be due January 2021. Details regarding
publication (publisher and timeline) will be sent when proposals are accepted.
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