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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260415T144527Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Lisbon:20240515T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Lisbon:20240515T170000
SUMMARY:THE FILM-PHIL LISBON SEMINARS: BERND HERZOGENRATH
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TZID:Europe/Lisbon
LOCATION:Colégio Almada Negreiros/Faculdade de Ciências Sociais e Humanas – NOVA FCSH room SE1\, Lisbon\, Portugal\, 1099-032
DESCRIPTION:<p>May's Film-Phil Lisbon Seminar (2023-2024) will be led by Bernd Herzogenrath (Goethe University of Frankfurt\, Germany) who will talk about &ldquo\;The Way of All Flesh: Decasia and Death of|as Film&rdquo\;. The session will be held on May 15\, 2024\, at 15:00 PM (Lisbon time) Room CAN SE1 and Online.</p>\n<p>ABSTRACT Bill Morrison&rsquo\;s 'Decasia' has death and decay already in its title. This talk focuses on the nexus of film\, death\, and materiality. Film is by default seen as a representation of time and its passing &ndash\; 'Decasia' goes a decisive step further by focusing on the temporality of|in the filmic material. The medium 'film' seems most fitting to test such an of Material Culture and Media Studies\, since film has entertained a most complex relation to time and death from its early beginnings onward: film promised to [re]present temporal dynamics &ndash\; and the temporality of things &ndash\; directly\, unmediated\, a paradox that gives rise to the different &lsquo\;strategies&rsquo\; of what Deleuze calls the movement-image and the time-image respectively. Such a representation\, however\, is not only an effect of a perceptive illusion\, but also of the repression of the very materiality of film itself. If such an interest in the possibilities of the celluloid had already driven much of the 60s avant-garde [Brakhage\, Jacobs\, etc.]\, 'Decasia' in addition does not only focus on film&rsquo\;s &lsquo\;thingness\,&rsquo\; but also its own\, particular &lsquo\;mortality&rsquo\;. Put together from found footage and archive material in various states of &lsquo\;dying\,&rsquo\; this film reveals the &lsquo\;collaboration&rsquo\; of decay and matter as in itself &lsquo\;creative\,&rsquo\; and ultimately produces a category that I will call the matter-image and that\, he argues\, neither Deleuze&rsquo\;s movement-image\, nor his time-image completely grasp: here\, time\, death and matter produce their own filmic image.</p>\n<p>BIO Bernd Herzogenrath is Professor of American literature and culture at Goethe University of Frankfurt am Main\, Germany. He is the author of&nbsp\;'An Art of Desire: Reading Paul Auster'&nbsp\;(1999) and&nbsp\;'An American Body|Politic: A Deleuzian Approach'&nbsp\;(2010) and editor of&nbsp\;'The Farthest Place: The Music of John Luther Adams'&nbsp\;(2012) and&nbsp\;'Deleuze|Guattari &amp\; Ecology'&nbsp\;(2009). His latest publications include the collections&nbsp\;'The Films of Bill Morrison. Aesthetics of the Archive'&nbsp\;(2017)\,&nbsp\;'Film as Philosophy'&nbsp\;(2017)\, and&nbsp\;'Practical Aesthetics'&nbsp\;(Bloomsbury\, 2020).</p>\n<p>Funded by the European Union (ERC\, FILM AND DEATH\, 101088956). Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Research Council Executive Agency. Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them.</p>\n<p>*&nbsp\;Note that to receive information about joining the meeting online\, it is mandatory to register in advance:videoconf-colibri.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJ0kf-2rrD0jH9H_2XG6XQWO9UK6ie6Wqog0.</p>
ORGANIZER;CN=Susana Viegas:
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