For more on this film, read "Beyond Partition: The Political Horizons of Contemporary Indian and Korean War Films" by Bhaskar Sarkar |
Film Studies For Free just came across a really good e-journal that it hadnt bumped into before: Journal of the Moving Image, an annual publication of the Department of Film Studies, Jadavpur University, Kolkata.
It was launched in print format in 1999, but its print and online versions now co-exist. As its mission statement puts it,
JMI seeks to represent critical work on the state of contemporary screen cultures. There are many regions in the world with large viewing populations, often with vast production infrastructures for film and television; but corresponding institutions or forums for critical engagement with such audio-visual regimes are still highly inadequate. JMI seeks to address a broad set of issues ranging from formal properties of the moving image to the social foundation of its production, transmission and reception. There will be a special focus on India and South Asia, and on issues of transnational media transactions, but we would like to offer a wider range of discussion on film and television from various parts of the world made from different perspectives.
FSFF wanted to share its contents with you promptly, so direct links to all items so far online are pasted in below, with the most recent issue first. The first three issues of JMI are also being prepared for online publication.
There are some excellent items here (you might try out Ravi Vasudevans The Meanings of ‘Bollywood’ just for starters). So FSFF heartily recommends that you subscribe to JMI ready for its next issue in December.
(Also, please check out, if you havent yet, FSFFs own related entry: "Bollywood" for Beginners and Beyond: Introductions to Popular Hindi Cinema Studies)
There are some excellent items here (you might try out Ravi Vasudevans The Meanings of ‘Bollywood’ just for starters). So FSFF heartily recommends that you subscribe to JMI ready for its next issue in December.
(Also, please check out, if you havent yet, FSFFs own related entry: "Bollywood" for Beginners and Beyond: Introductions to Popular Hindi Cinema Studies)
- Preserving Film (on Film) in a Digital Age Josef Lindner
- Together against the Mafia: Godard, Scorsese, Bit Torrent Sebastian Lutgert
- Cinema’s Floating Point Matt Hanson
- Of Jesters, Clowns and Pranksters: YouTube and the Condition of Collaborative Authorship Nishant Shah
- Photoshop Landscapes: Digital Mediations and Bollywood Cities Madhija Mukherjee
- Special Feature Conjunction and Flow: The Gendered Temporalities of (Media) Disasters Kumkum Sangari
- Querying the ‘Traditional’ Roots of Silent Cinema in Asia Kaushik Bhaumik
- The Subject of Representation in Korean Cinema: Two Limit Cases Earl Jackson, Jr.
- Missing in the Original: Twin Dragons Remade in India S.V. Srinivas
- Student Paper New Urban Spaces: Films of Tsai Ming-liang Michelle Baitali Bhowmik
- Special Feature The Meanings of ‘Bollywood’ Ravi Vasudevan
- An Aesthetic for Film Sound in India? Ashish Rajadhyaksha
- Communication and Signification: Voice in the Cinema M. Madhava Prasad
- Early Indian Talkies: Voice, Performance and Aura Madhuja Mukherjee
- Musical Contests: Reflections on Musical Values in Popular Film Amlan Das Gupta
- Speaking through Troubled Times Moinak Biswas
- Seeing through the Sound: Certain Tendencies of the Soundtrack in Satyajit Rays Films of the 1970s Anindya Sengupta
- Student Papers Sound Memories: In Search of Lost Sounds in Indian Cinema Budhaditya Chattopadhyay and Sound of Horror: Sound and Dread in Hindi Cinema Shubham Roy Choudhury
- Special Feature Space, Interiority and Affect in Charulata and Ghare Baire Supriya Chaudhuri
- The Curious Case of Bombay’s Hindi Cinema: The Career of Indigenous ‘Exhibition’ Capital Ashish Rajadhyaksha
- Mourning and Blood-Ties: Macbeth in Mumbai Moinak Biswas
- Memories of Development: The Fantastic Non-Presence of Kolkata in Post-Liberalization Bangla Cinema Sovan Tarafder
- The Subjects of News Television M. Madhava Prasad
- Kyunki Main Bhi Kabhi Tulsi Thi : Opening and Using the Black Box of Primetime Telereality Ipsita Chanda
- Media Trials and Courtroom Tribulations : The Battle of Images, Words and Shadows in the 13 December Case Suddhabrata Sengupta
- Remote Control Nationalism: Media politics in Guyana Atticus Narrain
0 komentar:
Posting Komentar