Jonathan Rosenbaum KASK cinema Gent 28/10/11 from Courtisane Festival on Vimeo.
Jacques Rancière - Bozar studios Brussels - 18/11/'11 from Courtisane Festival on Vimeo.
“For
me, film criticism is not a way of explaining or classifying things,
it’s a way of prolonging them, making them resonate differently”
Today, Film Studies For Free presents some videos it's been meaning to link to here for an age: a series of very extensive, and very wonderful, masterclasses given by Adrian Martin, Jonathan Rosenbaum and Jacques Rancière in Brussels in 2011.
Their talks, part of the "Goodbye Cinema, Hello Cinephilia" project, explore the status and possibility of cinephilia and film critical thinking. These astonishingly good events took their title from the wonderful 2010 book by Jonathan Rosenbaum.
Below are a few related links, including one to FSFF's mammoth collection of online writing on cinephilia.
Below are a few related links, including one to FSFF's mammoth collection of online writing on cinephilia.
- Catherine Grant, 'C is for Cinephilia Studies (plus some telephilia, too)', Film Studies For Free, May 28, 2009
- Adrian Martin, 'That Summer Feeling', Fipresci, 2005
- Adrian Martin's monthly Filmkrant columns, July 2010-present
- Jacques Rancière, 'The Thwarted Fable', Rouge, 8, 2006
- Jacques Rancière , 'Aesthetic Separation, Aesthetic Community: Scenes from the Aesthetic Regime of Art', Art and Research, 2.1, 2008
- Jonathan Rosenbaum, 'Goodbye Cinema, Hello Cinephilia', JonathanRosenbaum.com, June 24, 2004
- Jonathan Rosenbaum, 'The Missing Image - From Cinephilia to the World - The Trajectory of Serge Daney', originally published in The New Left Review, 34, July-August 2005
- Jonathan Rosenbaum and Adrian Martin, 'Preface to Movie Mutations: The changing face of world cinephilia', Fipresci Documents, 2004
- Jonathan Rosenbaum, 'Movie Love: Film-history tidbits in a monument to French cinephilia', Moving Image Source, March 5, 2009
- Jason Sperb, Be Kind...Rewind', Jamais Vu, May 13, 2012
1 comment:
How many times can Ranciere say "you know" in this lecture? :-)
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