“The position that an epoch occupies in the historical process can be determined more strikingly from an analysis of its inconspicuous surface-level expressions than from that epoch’s judgement about itself.”
Siegfried Kracauer, The Mass Ornament
Notes on Blindness by Peter Middleton and James Spinney
A moving example of a film in which the images and the script complement each other to provide insights that neither on their own provide.
In 1983, after years of deteriorating vision, the writer and theologian John Hull lost the last traces of light sensation. For the next three years, he kept a diary on audio-cassette of his interior world of blindness. Notes on Blindness is a dramatization that uses his original recordings. It was commissioned by the New York Times and premiered at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival. It won the Documentary Award at Encounters Short Film Festival. The film and accompanying texts can be found on The New York Times website here.
http://www.notesonblindness.co.uk/
“We go to poetry to be forwarded within ourselves”
Seamus Heaney, The Redress of Poetry
Jenna Sutela – New Degrees Of Freedom
Jenna’s website New Degrees Of Freedom featured as a blogpost in April 2014. The website has been updated to include Act 3 here.
“In effect, every new link between one’s online and offline identities removes a ‘degree of freedom’…If the body cannot be emancipated online — indeed the Internet has proved to be not virtual enough — let us imagine new modes of existence in the physical world…”
Source: http://newdegreesoffreedom.com
Birkbeck Institute of Moving Image – Essay Film Festival
Shame I’ll miss the Catherine Grant’s masterclass and screening on Friday 20th March 6.00-9.00pm (although I’m looking forward to being in Berlin for the Lunch Bytes conference with, amongst others Constant Dullaart, Cornelia Sollfrank, Jenna Sutella, Ben Vickers, Hito Steyerl, Melissa Gronlund and David Joselit). Tickets can be booked . Dr Catherine Grant (University of Sussex) writes about and teaches media. She is well known for her video essays made of found footage. She also runs Film Studies For Free, a regularly updated web-archive of links to the best resources in moving image studies. In March 2014, Grant became founding co-editor of [in]TRANSITION, the first ever peer-reviewed journal of videographic film and moving image studies. Dr Grant will talk about practical aspects of essayistic film-making, its ambitions and frustrations. Her masterclass will be followed by a screening of the essay films produced in the film-making experiment.
http://www.essayfilmfestival.com/
“[literature gives] an experience that is like a foreknowledge of certain things which we already seem to be remembering.”
Seamus Heaney, The Redress of Poetry
A slight diversion – Marina Warner in LRB “on the disfiguring of higher education”
“All this follows from the changing economics of education policy. Cuts are the tools of the ideological decision to stop subsidising tuition and to start withdrawing from directly supporting research. What we are in effect moving towards is the privatisation of research… [read the whole article ]”
Adorno, Minima Moralia
“The haste, nervousness, restlessness observed since the rise of the big cities is now spreading in the manner of an epidemic, as did once the plague and cholera. In the process forces are being unleashed that were undreamed of by the scurrying passer-by of the nineteenth century. Everybody must have projects all the time. The maximum must be extracted from leisure. This is planned, used for undertakings, crammed with visits to every conceivable site or spectacle, or just with the fastest possible locomotion. The shadow of all this falls on intellectual work. It is done with bad conscience, as if it had been poached from some urgent, even if only imaginary occupation. To justify itself in its own eyes it puts on a show of hectic activity performed under great pressure and shortage of time, which excludes all reflection and therefore itself. […] As here, so generally, the forms of the production process are repeated in private life, or in those areas of work exempted from these forms themselves. The whole of life must look like a job, and by this resemblance conceal what is not yet directly devoted to pecuniary gain. […] Doing things and going places is an attempt by the sensorium to set up a kind of counter-irritant against a threatening collectivization, to get in training for it by using the hours apparently left to freedom to coach oneself as a member of the mass.”