From uwcinema at u.washington.edu Wed Feb 12 22:13:08 2025 From: uwcinema at u.washington.edu (UW Cinema Studies List via Uwcinema) Date: Thu Feb 13 08:53:13 2025 Subject: [UWcinema] Silent Cinema SIG Event on Zoom March 13 References: Message-ID: UW CMS friends ? I?m pleased to moderate this conversation with Australian filmmaker/scholar Karen Pearlman on March 13, 2:30 PST. Pearlman?s films, audiovisual essays, and broader research (including her forthcoming editing textbook) recovers the seismic impact of women editors on film history and cultures ( including the women who taught Eisenstein and Vertov how it could, even should, be done!). More information, including a Zoom link, forthcoming. This just to say ?Save the Date? if you?re so inclined. Cheers, JB [FlyerSilentSIGEvent2.png] -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: FlyerSilentSIGEvent2.png Type: image/png Size: 470999 bytes Desc: FlyerSilentSIGEvent2.png URL: From uwcinema at u.washington.edu Mon Feb 24 09:52:47 2025 From: uwcinema at u.washington.edu (UW Cinema Studies List via Uwcinema) Date: Mon Feb 24 10:00:53 2025 Subject: [UWcinema] Feb 28: CMS Works in Progress Presentations by Runjie Wang, Yumo Yan, and Kallie Strode Message-ID: Hi All, Please find below the details for the upcoming Works in Progress Presentations on Friday, Feb 28th, 3:00 PM - 5:00 PM, CMU 202, Simpson Center: Cinemetric/Cinematic Encodings: Industrial Films, Machine Vision, and Their Aesthetic-Technical-Epistemic Operations [cid:ee7b2be0-dab4-4998-b181-7e266667258e] Abstract: My presentation examines the intersection of industrial films/videos and industrial vision technologies to explore how visual media and automated visual inspection systems encode symbolic assumptions of normalcy, order and uniformity into their visual and operational framework. Reading industrials films vis-?-vis the design conceptualization of industrial vision technologies reveals that machine vision?s process of measuring industrial objects is not purely technical?it is also deeply aesthetic and epistemic. Ultimately, the presentation argues for understanding the recursive and co-constitutive relations of the technical and symbolic, the operational and representational in the shaping of industrial visual operations. Runjie Wang is PhD Candidate in Cinema and Media Studies whose research centralizes scientific, industrial, and utility films in a constellation of media and technical objects that institutionalize knowledge and evidence. His writings have appeared or are forthcoming in The Moving Image, Asian Cinema, and Media Industries. A Space for Women: Gender, Class, and Women?s Lounges in 1930s Chinese Movie Palaces [cid:96fe22ee-d6d1-433b-aadc-3ddd84f49dec] Abstract: If 1930s Hollywood exported films, stars, and the American dream, did it also export gendered leisure spaces? This paper talks about the design and spatial planning of women?s lounges in three Chinese movie palaces in the 1930s: Shanghai?s Nanking Theater, Nanjing?s Xindu Theater, and Nanjing?s Dahua Theater. The women?s lounge was a popular and staple amenity in American movie palaces from the 1910s to the 1930s, providing a space for female moviegoers of all classes to powder, rest, and socialize before and after the show. As discussed by Shelley Stamp, Lucy Fischer, Ross Melnick and Andreas Fuchs, the women?s lounge stood for a feminized and cross-class moviegoing culture that Hollywood was cultivating at the time. The women?s lounge was brought to a few 1930s Chinese movie theaters by U.S-trained Chinese and Chinese American architects, who incorporated the space into their theater designs. Yet, prior scholarship on 1930s Chinese film exhibition never mentioned this gendered amenity in Chinese theaters. In my paper, I examine the blueprints of the three Chinese movie palaces. By comparing the design and spatial planning of the Chinese women?s lounges with blueprints of American movie palaces like the Seattle Paramount Theater, I demonstrate how the Chinese architects sought to transplant the space?s feminized and cross-class appeal to Chinese theaters. Yet, the women?s lounge proved to be fundamentally incompatible with existing conceptions of class, gender, and leisure in 1930s Chinese society and local film exhibition practices, and was quickly replaced by non-gendered and class-based spaces (for instance, a tearoom) when the theaters were renovated in the 1940s. In this paper, I reveal the seldom-known transnational transplantation of the women?s lounge in 1930s Chinese movie theaters. I parse how space carried cultural meanings across borders, and ponder on how movie theater blueprints can open up new perspectives on the studies of historical film exhibition. Yumo Yan is a PhD candidate in Cinema and Media Studies at the University of Washington, Seattle. A Phenomenology for the Queerbait: Calvin Klein, fashion fandoms, & the coldness of Lil Miquela [cid:1a748ad2-1fd3-4bae-b7d3-da979f85454e] Abstract: Taking Marshall McLuhan?s conception of cool media as its point of departure, this piece dislodges the celebrity robot Lil Miquela as a form of low-definition media who, by virtue of her parafictional design, must be repeatedly ?filled in? by her fans as they imaginatively backtrack to speculate about the details of her impression. Here it is argued that the virtual influencer?s fandom, through its required exhibition this archeological impulse, more largely indexes the queer fan?s paradoxical subject position: in Heather Love?s words, one that is always looking forwards while also ?feeling backwards.? Miquela?s coolness acts as an ideal affective infrastructure for retaining the posthuman?s fanbase and for queerbaiting it?especially against the backdrop of the fashion industry. In the spring of 2019, the bot was featured in the Calvin Klein commercial ?Miquela and Bella Hadid Get Surreal,? wherein she and (the human) supermodel Bella Hadid engage in a lesbian kiss. The coldness of both Miquela and the model not only allow them to retain sexual ambiguousness, but satisfies fashion?s constant recruitment of the affectless feminine, of the statuesque. Kallie Strode is a Ph.D candidate in the department of Cinema & Media Studies at the University of Washington, Seattle. Her research predominantly focuses on feminisms, pop culture, affect, and design. She is published in the journal Screen Bodies and is currently working on a piece on anxiety and shiny objects in Olivier Assayas? film Personal Shopper (2016). Feel free to forward this to interested parties, thank you. Hope to see you there! This event will be followed by Happy Hour, with the location to be confirmed. Cheers, Mavis Siu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Cinemetric_Cinematic Encodings.png Type: image/png Size: 2176597 bytes Desc: Cinemetric_Cinematic Encodings.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: A Space for Women.png Type: image/png Size: 1039832 bytes Desc: A Space for Women.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Outlook-lgk3crm4.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 55225 bytes Desc: Outlook-lgk3crm4.jpg URL: From uwcinema at u.washington.edu Wed Feb 26 11:11:53 2025 From: uwcinema at u.washington.edu (UW Cinema Studies List via Uwcinema) Date: Wed Feb 26 11:39:55 2025 Subject: [UWcinema] =?windows-1252?q?Mar_7=3A_=22Mark_Weiser=92s_Minority_?= =?windows-1252?q?Report=22_Book_Talk_by_Gerald_Sim?= Message-ID: Hi All, Please find below the details for the Book Talk on Screening Big Data: Films that Shape Our Algorithmic Literacy (Friday, Mar 7th, 3:30 PM - 5:00 PM, CMU 202, Simpson Center): Title: Mark Weiser?s Minority Report [cid:64389d22-50b5-4954-9827-c3e3955ae48a] Synopsis: Gerald Sim introduces his recent book, Screening Big Data, and highlights the ways in which films like Moneyball and Coded Bias structure public understanding of current tech debates and controversies. Following that discussion, he examines how Spielberg?s Minority Report has transcended Philip K. Dick?s 1956 novella, largely on the strength of two iconic sequences whose production designs are hailed as technologically prescient. Celebrated most prominently by Wired, the film's origin story features a cadre of luminaries from the techno-media-industrial complex who consulted during preproduction. That historical myth effaces the contribution of computing visionary Mark Weiser, whose philosophical writing about ubiquitous computing illuminates the enduring relevance of Minority Report and reminds us of the technologists who preached caution and foresaw AI harms long before the current techlash. Speaker's Bio: Gerald Sim is a professor of film and media studies at Florida Atlantic University. He is the author of Screening Big Data: Films that Shape Our Algorithmic Literacy (Routledge 2024), and articles about digital culture, data politics, and new media history in Television & New Media, Convergence, Projections, and the collection The Netflix Effect (Bloomsbury 2016). His work on Edward Said?s influence on film studies, CNBC personality Jim Cramer, film music theory, and Asian cinemas can be found in Discourse, Rethinking Marxism, positions, Quarterly Review of Film and Video, Inter-Asia Cultural Studies, Asian Cinema, and Film Quarterly. His first two books are Postcolonial Hangups in Southeast Asian Cinema: Poetics of Space, Sound, and Stability (Amsterdam UP 2020), and The Subject of Film and Race: Retheorizing Politics, Ideology, and Cinema (Bloomsbury 2014). Feel free to forward this to interested parties, thank you. Hope to see you there! Cheers, Mavis Siu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image.png Type: image/png Size: 2271429 bytes Desc: image.png URL: From uwcinema at u.washington.edu Thu Feb 27 12:00:00 2025 From: uwcinema at u.washington.edu (UW Cinema Studies List via Uwcinema) Date: Thu Feb 27 12:05:12 2025 Subject: [UWcinema] TOMORROW (Fri, 3PM) - Feb 28: CMS Works in Progress Presentations by Runjie Wang, Yumo Yan, and Kallie Strode In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Hi All, Please be reminded that the presentations will start at 3 PM tomorrow. Looking forward to seeing you there! Cheers, Mavis Siu ________________________________ From: Mavis Siu Sent: Monday, February 24, 2025 9:52 AM To: cmsfaculty@uw.edu ; cmsfaculty_adjuncts@uw.edu ; cmsgrads@uw.edu ; cmscertgrads@uw.edu ; uwcinema@uw.edu Subject: Feb 28: CMS Works in Progress Presentations by Runjie Wang, Yumo Yan, and Kallie Strode Hi All, Please find below the details for the upcoming Works in Progress Presentations on Friday, Feb 28th, 3:00 PM - 5:00 PM, CMU 202, Simpson Center: Cinemetric/Cinematic Encodings: Industrial Films, Machine Vision, and Their Aesthetic-Technical-Epistemic Operations [cid:ee7b2be0-dab4-4998-b181-7e266667258e] Abstract: My presentation examines the intersection of industrial films/videos and industrial vision technologies to explore how visual media and automated visual inspection systems encode symbolic assumptions of normalcy, order and uniformity into their visual and operational framework. Reading industrials films vis-?-vis the design conceptualization of industrial vision technologies reveals that machine vision?s process of measuring industrial objects is not purely technical?it is also deeply aesthetic and epistemic. Ultimately, the presentation argues for understanding the recursive and co-constitutive relations of the technical and symbolic, the operational and representational in the shaping of industrial visual operations. Runjie Wang is PhD Candidate in Cinema and Media Studies whose research centralizes scientific, industrial, and utility films in a constellation of media and technical objects that institutionalize knowledge and evidence. His writings have appeared or are forthcoming in The Moving Image, Asian Cinema, and Media Industries. A Space for Women: Gender, Class, and Women?s Lounges in 1930s Chinese Movie Palaces [cid:96fe22ee-d6d1-433b-aadc-3ddd84f49dec] Abstract: If 1930s Hollywood exported films, stars, and the American dream, did it also export gendered leisure spaces? This paper talks about the design and spatial planning of women?s lounges in three Chinese movie palaces in the 1930s: Shanghai?s Nanking Theater, Nanjing?s Xindu Theater, and Nanjing?s Dahua Theater. The women?s lounge was a popular and staple amenity in American movie palaces from the 1910s to the 1930s, providing a space for female moviegoers of all classes to powder, rest, and socialize before and after the show. As discussed by Shelley Stamp, Lucy Fischer, Ross Melnick and Andreas Fuchs, the women?s lounge stood for a feminized and cross-class moviegoing culture that Hollywood was cultivating at the time. The women?s lounge was brought to a few 1930s Chinese movie theaters by U.S-trained Chinese and Chinese American architects, who incorporated the space into their theater designs. Yet, prior scholarship on 1930s Chinese film exhibition never mentioned this gendered amenity in Chinese theaters. In my paper, I examine the blueprints of the three Chinese movie palaces. By comparing the design and spatial planning of the Chinese women?s lounges with blueprints of American movie palaces like the Seattle Paramount Theater, I demonstrate how the Chinese architects sought to transplant the space?s feminized and cross-class appeal to Chinese theaters. Yet, the women?s lounge proved to be fundamentally incompatible with existing conceptions of class, gender, and leisure in 1930s Chinese society and local film exhibition practices, and was quickly replaced by non-gendered and class-based spaces (for instance, a tearoom) when the theaters were renovated in the 1940s. In this paper, I reveal the seldom-known transnational transplantation of the women?s lounge in 1930s Chinese movie theaters. I parse how space carried cultural meanings across borders, and ponder on how movie theater blueprints can open up new perspectives on the studies of historical film exhibition. Yumo Yan is a PhD candidate in Cinema and Media Studies at the University of Washington, Seattle. A Phenomenology for the Queerbait: Calvin Klein, fashion fandoms, & the coldness of Lil Miquela [cid:1a748ad2-1fd3-4bae-b7d3-da979f85454e] Abstract: Taking Marshall McLuhan?s conception of cool media as its point of departure, this piece dislodges the celebrity robot Lil Miquela as a form of low-definition media who, by virtue of her parafictional design, must be repeatedly ?filled in? by her fans as they imaginatively backtrack to speculate about the details of her impression. Here it is argued that the virtual influencer?s fandom, through its required exhibition this archeological impulse, more largely indexes the queer fan?s paradoxical subject position: in Heather Love?s words, one that is always looking forwards while also ?feeling backwards.? Miquela?s coolness acts as an ideal affective infrastructure for retaining the posthuman?s fanbase and for queerbaiting it?especially against the backdrop of the fashion industry. In the spring of 2019, the bot was featured in the Calvin Klein commercial ?Miquela and Bella Hadid Get Surreal,? wherein she and (the human) supermodel Bella Hadid engage in a lesbian kiss. The coldness of both Miquela and the model not only allow them to retain sexual ambiguousness, but satisfies fashion?s constant recruitment of the affectless feminine, of the statuesque. Kallie Strode is a Ph.D candidate in the department of Cinema & Media Studies at the University of Washington, Seattle. Her research predominantly focuses on feminisms, pop culture, affect, and design. She is published in the journal Screen Bodies and is currently working on a piece on anxiety and shiny objects in Olivier Assayas? film Personal Shopper (2016). Feel free to forward this to interested parties, thank you. Hope to see you there! This event will be followed by Happy Hour, with the location to be confirmed. Cheers, Mavis Siu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Cinemetric_Cinematic Encodings.png Type: image/png Size: 2176597 bytes Desc: Cinemetric_Cinematic Encodings.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: A Space for Women.png Type: image/png Size: 1039832 bytes Desc: A Space for Women.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... 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