2019/1 – #Emotions
Browsing 2019/1 – #Emotions by Issue Date
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- ArticleThe emotional politics of limerence in romantic comedy filmsMoss-Wellington, Wyatt (2019) , S. 191-209‘Limerence’ describes the intensity of emotions often felt during the pair-forming stage of a romantic relationship, a period that is also the primary focus of many romantic comedy films. This article asks how filmmakers have used depictions of limerence to highlight spaces in which its potential for both disruption and loving care could be brought to political spheres. I look at a series of millennial romantic comedies that express emotional upheaval, vulnerability, and openness to change as qualities of relevance to both a romantic and political selfhood. These ‘political romcoms’ reveal a range of dynamic relations between notions of character competence, moral fibre, personality and deservedness, and invite investigation of complex emotions that modify a more generalised positive affect associated with romantic comedy cinema: humiliation as a comic device and the existential fear of rejection.
- ArticleHaunting surveillance: Foregrounding the spectre of the medium in CCTV and military dronesAlbuquerque, Paula (2019) , S. 31-50Even in the age of fake news, alternative facts and deep fakes, digital surveillance media are valued for their documentary stance. CCTV and military drone footage are relied on for evidence of potential deviances. While exposing these media shortcomings in producing reliable evidence, I map video surveillance’s medium-specific instances of production of otherworldly visual phenomena with apparently no referent in material reality. This article consists of an exposition of my artistic research approach to modes of image production, which compare ghost sightings captured by spirit photography to those recorded/produced by contemporary surveillance media, to unveil the social and political impact of non-transparent image-producing mediators.
- ArticleNew ways of seeing (and hearing): The audiovisual essay and televisionGrant, Catherine; Kooijman, Jaap (2019) , S. 293-297
- ArticleBREAKING BAD and surrealismRestivo, Angelo (2019) , S. 313-316
- ArticleThe affective niches of mediaHven, Steffen (2019) , S. 105-123This article explores the potential value of affective niche theory for understanding how media-induced emotions, especially those related to the cinema, extend beyond the body of the human organism and are thus to varying degrees scaffolded by environmental factors. A central thesis is that cinema creates ‘affective niches’ based on ‘sensory isolates’ that enable the experience of, for example, horror or extreme violence without having to actually fear for our lives. This article explores ways in which affective niche theory allows for the theorising of mediated affectivity as situated in the intermediary space between organism and environment.
- ArticleHow Black Lives Matter in THE WIRE: A video essayMittel, Jason (2019) , S. 299-300
- ArticleEpisodes of depression: Existential feelings and embodiment in SHARP OBJECTSRichard, David Evan (2019) , S. 211-229This article argues that the HBO recent limited series Sharp Objects (cr. Marti Noxon, 2018) invites spectators to share in the ‘existential feeling’ of depression. I draw on philosophers Matthew Ratcliffe and Thomas Fuchs who identify core embodied experiences of depression: corporealisation, detunement, and desynchronisation. Following accounts of screen mood and ‘existential feelings’, I analyse how the form of Sharp Objects – cinematography, textural sound, and arrhythmic editing – expresses the embodied experience of depression. This paper therefore further demonstrates how screen media can evoke ‘existential feelings’ in its audience to promote an embodied understanding of depression.
- ArticleMedia and emotion: An introductionEder, Jens; Hanich, Julian; Stadler, Jane (2019) , S. 91-104This article provides a meta-theoretical overview of the central research questions, concepts, and lines of conflict at the nexus between media and emotions. It interrogates key terms such as affect and emotion, discusses a variety of influential approaches in emotion research, and identifies debates and tensions in the field of study. Within this vast and complex interdisciplinary field and the broad range of affective phenomena it covers, we concentrate primarily on various types of media-induced emotions, with a focus on the development of ideas about screen media and spectatorship.
- ArticleEditorial NECSUSNECSUS Editorial Board (2019) , S. 1-3
- ArticleBooks of faces: Cultural techniques of basic emotionsBollmer, Grant (2019) , S. 125-150This article examines books of faces – serial images of faces performing a multitude of expressions – as a cultural technique employed in empirical, experimental psychological research on facial emotion. It focuses on the generally forgotten work of Robert S. Woodworth, Harold Schlosberg, Theodor Piderit, and Jean Frois-Wittmann, arguing that the media employed in their research provide the operative foundations for discrete ‘affect programs’ of ‘basic emotions’. The article opens and concludes with discussions of digital emotion recognition technologies, suggesting that the category system of emotion represented by the work of these psychologists is, perhaps, coming to an end.
- ArticleNothing to Write Home AboutSoni, Roma Madan (2019) , S. 259-271
- ArticleDigging deeper: On horizontal and vertical landscapesMavrokordopoulou, Kyveli (2019) , S. 249-258
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- ArticleThe film is the museum: Ken Jacobs, Gus Van Sant, Mark Lewis, and Pierre PerraultLe Maître, Barbara (2019) , S. 15-30In the last twenty years, the question of the relationship between cinema and the museum has been raised in multiple theoretical and practical contexts. The purpose of this text is in a sense to reverse the way in which the question has been posed by shifting the conversation from the film as object for the museum to that of the film as museum. Taking as a starting point the diversity inherent in institutional museums as well as the constant redefinition of the project which those institutions nonetheless have in common, this essay develops the hypothesis of a delocalisation (accompanied by a reinvention) of most of the functions traditionally associated with the museum. Those functions can now happen elsewhere, as for instance in (and via) a film which can be transformed into an exhibition site or an act of restauration. Ultimately, that which is referred to as ‘curatorial gesture’ encompasses the entirety or part of a necessarily polymorphous curatorial project which is essentially redefined through film.
- ArticleDreading the future: Narrative dread in BETTER CALL SAUL and contemporary televisionBrown, David W R (2019) , S. 231-248This article defines and conceptualises the emotion ‘narrative dread’. Most discussions of what we might call narrative emotions – such as suspense, curiosity, and surprise – have focused on film. By contrast, comparatively little has been said about the particularities of narrative and emotion in relation to long-form television series. The article proposes that narrative dread differs from other similar responses through its distinct temporality and level of knowledge. Through a discussion of the series BETTER CALL SAUL, the article argues that narrative dread is particularly effectively elicited by the long-form narration that is typical of contemporary dramatic television series.
- ArticleTelevision as new media: Raymond-Millet’s TÉLÉVISION: OEIL DE DEMAIN (1947) and the politics of French experimental TVWeber, Anne-Katrin (2019) , S. 69-89This paper analyses the meaning of newness in television history by focusing on the French film Télévision: Oeil de demain (J. K. Raymond-Millet, 1947). It argues that the film’s futurist depiction of television veils the medium’s longue durée, and exemplifies a discursive strategy to conceal most recent technological and institutional developments, in particular those linking French television to National-Socialist occupation. The novelty discourse is instrumental to mask the many continuities between the National-Socialist Fernsehsender Paris and postwar French television, and helps to conceive of television as new media unburdened by recent history.
- ArticleA conversation with Pierre Sorlin about film studies, film and history, and European cinemaPitassio, Francesco (2019) , S. 5-14A discussion with Pierre Sorlin focusing on his career and approach. It first tackles his method, moving from history to the role audiovisual representation plays as a historical agent and source, and the merging of different disciplines in coining said approach, including social history, semiology, sociology of culture, and production studies. The conversation then moves to considering the role of national and supranational audiovisual production, notably European and Italian. Finally, it deals with the role film and media studies played in European humanities in previous decades, and considers their prospective function.
- ArticleHistoriographies of women in early cinemaOzgen-Tuncer, Asli (2019) , S. 273-281
- ArticleThe Female Narcotrafficker‘s Tongue | La Lengua de la NarcotraficanteLlamas-Rodriguez, Juan (2019) , S. 309-311
- ArticleEuropean heritage and televisionValente, Donatella (2019) , S. 283-291