Post-Cinematic Realism
In its classical formulation, cinematic realism is based in the photographic ontology of film, i.e. in the photograph’s indexical relation to the world, which grants to film its unique purchase on reality; upon this relation also hinged, for many realist filmmakers, the political promise of realism. Digital media, meanwhile, are widely credited with disrupting indexicality and instituting an alternative ontology of the image, but does that mean that realism as a potentially political power of connection with the world is dead? If we consider the extent to which reality itself is shaped and mediated through digital media today, the question begins to seem strange. As will be demonstrated with reference to a variety of moving-image texts dealing with drone warfare, online terrorism recruitment, and computationally mediated affects, post-cinematic media might in fact be credited with a newly intensified political relevance through their institution of a new, post-cinematic realism.
Speaker/s
Prof. Dr. Shane Denson (Stanford University)
Shane Denson is Assistant Professor of Film & Media Studies in the Department of Art & Art History at Stanford University. He is the author of ›Postnaturalism: Frankenstein, Film, and the Anthropotechnical Interface‹ (2014) and co-editor of several collections, including ›Transnational Perspectives on Graphic Narratives‹ (2013) ›Post-Cinema: Theorizing 21st-Century Film‹ (2016). His current book project ›Discorrelated Images‹ is forthcoming with Duke University Press
Event organiser/s
Projekt LeibnizWerkstatt - Deutsches Seminar und Leibniz School of Education
Date
10. July 201916:00 o'clock - 18:00 o'clock
Contact information
Frau Radhika NatarajanLeibniz School of Education
Lange Laube 32
30159 Hannover
radhika.natarajan@lehrerbildung.uni-hannover.de
Location
Conti HochhausBuilding: 1502
Room: 103
Königsworther Platz 1
30167 Hannover