Person: Hagener, Malte
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Job Title
Professor für Medienwissenschaft, insbesondere Geschichte, Theorie und Ästhetik des Films, an der Philipps-Universität Marburg und geschäftsführender Direktor des Marburg Center for Digital Culture and Infrastructure (MCDCI)
Last Name
Hagener
First Name
Malte
Name
3 results
Publications from this person:
Now showing 1 - 3 of 3
- ArticleZirkulation. Einleitung in den SchwerpunktHagener, Malte; Tellmann, Ute; Opitz, Sven (2020) , S. 10-19The concept of «circulation» has recently come to hold considerable appeal to the humanities and social sciences, mainly due to the aspects of movement it implies. The concept is being applied today to (nearly) everything that bridges distances und changes positions. Thinking about circulation in this sense implies a conception of order. Our aim is to make visible and place into question such ideas of order through the articulation of three dimensions: the opening and closing of circular movements, the mediated observation of circulation, and the role of infrastructure.
- ArticleData Papers – An IntroductionSchneider, Alexandra; Hagener, Malte (2023) , S. 359-362In order to diversify the scope of scholarly formats within NECSUS, the new section Data Papers offers a curated platform for publishing commented datasets from film and media studies research projects. It invites researchers to share insights into the often invisible collaborative work of data preparation and dataset collection.
- ArticleThe past is always changing: An interview with Tom GunningHagener, Malte; van den Oever, Annie (2022) , S. 150-174Tom Gunning is one of the most influential and widely cited film historians in the world with over 150 essays and publications on early cinema, the avant-garde, and film genres. He has published extensively on questions of film style and interpretation, film history and film culture, and on early cinema as well as on the culture of modernity from which cinema arose. In his seminal studies of the ‘cinema of attractions’, the concept he famously proposed, he set a new research agenda for early cinema studies by relating the development of cinema to other forces besides storytelling, such as new experiences of space and time in modernity, the relation between cinema and technology, and an emerging modern visual culture. Film culture, the avant-garde movements, the historical factors of exhibition and criticism, and the spectator’s experience throughout film history are recurrent themes in his work. In this interview, Malte Hagener and Annie van den Oever talk with Gunning about his writing process and his inspirations, the people he considers his mentors (Annette Michelson, Jay Leyda, Eileen Bowser, and David Francis), the legendary 1978 FIAF conference in Brighton, and the future of film studies.