Archives for July2013

CFP: Picturing the Family: Media, Narrative, Memory

This CFP might be of interest to those exploring the practices and aesthetics of home movie making in relation to questions of domesticity, familial networks and representation:

Picturing the Family: Media, Narrative, Memory

10 and 11 July 2014, Birkbeck (University of London)

Call for Papers:

This conference will set out to explore how concepts of family have been acted out, reinvented, or deconstructed, through various media including the visual arts, literature, and museum exhibitions, across the centuries. The family picture will be considered both in its figurative and artefactual forms. We will look at the significance of the family picture in literary works or films, and we will consider alternative concepts of family and kinship as pictured in paintings, photographs, graphic novels, and other visual media. We are interested in media transfers, the question of what happens to family pictures when they are included in literary or visual narratives whether these are autobiographical or fictional. We aim to explore how different media reproduce or replace the family picture, or evoke it once it becomes lost (e.g. through ekphrasis). We are also interested in the types of narratives that are created in museums, social media and family albums, through displays of family pictures and portraits.

Key questions to be examined will include: what are the changing conventions of the family picture and how do they reflect the changing conceptions of the institution of the family? Who is the addressee of the family portrait? How do family narratives and family pictures inform each other? What is the role of family pictures in individual and cultural memory? Is the family a privileged site of memorial transmission? Has it become the central trope through which national history is framed? What role do family pictures play within other cultural forms, e.g. in literature or film? Can other cultural forms offer alternatives to the kinds of family portrait we associate with photography?

We call for papers in English from across the disciplines and periods, as we wish to consider how the notion of ‘family’ translates across time, through various ways of picturing it.

This international, two-day conference will take place at Birkbeck, University of London, on 10 and 11 July 2014. It is organised by members of Birkbeck Research in Aesthetics of Kinship and Community and of the Department of European Cultures and Languages, Dr. Silke Arnold-de Simine, Dr. Joanne Leal, and Dr. Nathalie Wourm with the History and Theory of Photography Research Centre at Birkbeck.

Confirmed keynote speakers are:  Professor Martha Langford (Concordia University, Montreal) and Professor Annette Kuhn (Queen Mary University, London).

Please send an abstract of no more than 400 words to the organising committee at the following email address: by 30 November 2013.  We hope to publish a selection of the papers in due course.

 

 

‘In Search of Pleasures Past’

“In Search of Pleasures Past” by Les Roberts and Ryan Shand (2013) – “a nostalgic oral history project which documents amateur filmmakers’ reflections on the reception of two films about New Brighton, a seaside resort on the Wirral.” (JMPScreenworks Vol. 4, 2013)

‘Family Viewing: Stories We Tell’

Sarah Polley’s 2012 documentary, Stories We Tell, raises questions of recollection, memory, re-invented family stories and home movie making. See  ‘Family Viewing’, an interview with Polley’ by Richard Porton published in Cineaste (Summer 2013. pp. 36-40) and also Mark Kermode’s review of the film published in The Observer (30 June 2013)

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