Framework Volume 50, Numbers 1&2

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FW 50-1&2
Framework Volume 50, Numbers 1&2

Framework is an international, peer reviewed journal dedicated to theoretical and historical work on the diverse and current trends in media and film scholarship. The journal’s multicultural coverage, interdisciplinary focus, and the high caliber of its writers contributes to important interconnections between regional cinemas, practioners, academics, critics, and students. Framework is committed to publishing articles from interdisciplinary and global perspectives.


Table of Contents

Editorial
Drake Stutesman

Edward Said's Nazareth
Susan Slyomovics

DOSSIER: REENACTMENT IN CONTEMPORARY DOCUMENTARY FILM, VIDEO, AND PERFORMANCE
What Now?
Guest Editor: Jonathan Kahana

Introduction: What Now? Presenting Reenactment
Jonathan Kahana

Re-staging Two Laws: An Interview with Alessandro Cavadini and Carolyn Strachan
Jonathan Kahana

The Black Holes of History:  Raoul Peck's Two Lumumbas
Christopher Pavsek

Shattering Silence: Traumatic Memory and Reenactment in Rithy Panh's S-21: The Khmer Rouge Killing Machine
Deirdre Boyle

The Real Movie: Reenactment, Spectacle, and Recovery in Pierre Huyghe's The Third Memory
Ruth Erickson

Gender, Power, and Pedagogy in Coco Fusco's Bare Life Study #1 (2005), A Room of One's Own (2005), and Operation Atropos (2006)
Karen Beckman

New Left-Wing Melancholy: Mark Tribe's "The Port Huron Project" and the Politics of Reenactment
Paige Sarlin

Women, Trauma, and Late Modernity: Sontag, Duras, and Silence in Cinema, 1960-1980
E. Ann Kaplan

DOSSIER: CINEPHILIA
What is Being Fought for by Today's Cinephilia(s)?
Guest Editors: Jonathan Buchsbaum and Elena Gorfinkel

Introduction
Jonathan Buchsbaum and Elena Gorfinkel

Reply to Cinephilia Survey
Jonathan Rosenbaum

"They are like black lakes troubled by fantastic moons"
Ken Eisenstein

Some Reflections on the Cinephilia Question
Laura Mulvey

Cinephilia and the Imagination of Filmmaking
Chris Fujiwara

For an Insubordinate (or Rebellious) History of Cinema
Nicole Brenez

Philistines and Cinephiles: The New Deal
Laurent Jullier

Everyone I Know Is Stayin' Home: The New Cinephilia
James Quandt

On the Political Challenges of the Cinephile Today
Zachary Campbell

Cinematic Promiscuity: Cinephilia after Videophilia
Lucas Hilderbrand

What Is Being Fought For by Today's Cinephilia(s)?
Girish Shambu

Cinephilia as War Machine
Adrian Martin

Regarding Cinephilia and Africa
Aboubakar Sanogo

"Writing on the Screen": An Interview with Emmanuel Burdeau
Dudley Andrew

What Women Want: The Complex World of Dorothy Arzner and Her Cinematic Women
Donna R. Casella 

 

More Information
Additional Information 6x9, 274 pages, published January 4, 2010
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