Catherine Grant

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Aka @filmstudiesff. Honorary Professor at Aarhus Universitet; ex-Prof./Visiting Research Fellow at Birkbeck, University of London; Senior Visiting Research Fellow at University of Reading; elected member of Academia Europaea. #filmstudies #mediastudies #VideographicCriticism #openaccess https://linktr.ee/filmstudiesff
New open access book edited by Jens Eder, Britta Hartmann and Chris Tedjasukmana! Also available for purchase for libraries, etc. https://intellectdiscover.com/content/books/9781835950821
Understanding Video Activism on Social Media | Intellect

What political power do videos on social media have? In what ways do they exert influence, shape publics and change political life? And how can committed civil society actors in this field assert themselves against hegemonic discourses, commercial interests, anti-democratic agitation, and authoritarian propaganda? These questions are being debated intensely as social media increasingly dominate global information flows, and videos increasingly dominate social media. Understanding video activism seems particularly relevant at a time when the internet is undergoing fundamental disruptions. The forms, practices, and opportunities of activism depend on its media environment, which now is changing rapidly and profoundly in terms of its technological basis, ownership, legal regulations, and governmental control.

The latest issue of [in]Transition is up with 8 new video essays! https://intransition.openlibhums.org
[in]Transition

Via Dagmar Brunow, news of the publication of the open access book Citational Media: Counter-Archives and Technology in Contemporary Visual Culture! The book appears in the Legenda Visual Culture series, edited by Carolin Duttlinger.
https://www.mhra.org.uk/publications/Citational-Media
Citational Media: Counter-Archives and Technology in Contemporary Visual Culture - Edited by Annie Ring and Lucy Bollington

Modern Humanities Research Association - Citational Media: Counter-Archives and Technology in Contemporary Visual Culture - Edited by Annie Ring and Lucy Bollington

Modern Humanities Research Association

Reposting from Alexandra Edwards aka nonmodernist.com on Bluesky:

“Do you use the Media History Digital Library to research? If so, I need your help.

I made a free tool that turns weeks of Lantern/MHDL searching into hours of automated discovery ✨

Now I need testers doing literally any kind of deep or broad MHDL research!”

github.com/nonmodernist/magic-lantern

RIP Joe Don Baker (1936-2025). So powerful in Edge of Darkness, among many other incredible performances.
My video essay EDGE, featuring one of his wonderful scenes in Troy Kennedy Martin’s nuclear thriller, is online here:
https://vimeo.com/585878623
TV Dictionary - EDGE OF DARKNESS

A study of how the groundbreaking 1985 BBC TV series EDGE OF DARKNESS formally figured and explored the first word of its title in one of its most powerful scenes.…

Vimeo
Just a reminder that applications for the 2025 Scholarship in Sound & Image workshop at Middlebury College, Vermont, are due in about a week. Please encourage people to apply who might be able to attend & would benefit from the experience!
https://sites.middlebury.edu/videoworkshop/
Scholarship in Sound & Image

Workshop on Videographic Criticism

Scholarship in Sound & Image

Check out Steven Sehman’s fabulous video on sound and time in Mark Jenkins’ film Enys Men, newly published at 16:9.

http://www.16-9.dk/2024/10/the-present-is-the-past-is-the-present/

The Present Is the Past Is the Present: Sonic Repetition and Temporal Distortion in Enys Men - 16:9 filmtidsskrift

VIDEO ESSAY. Steven Sehman, in his video essay on Enys Men (2022), examines the effect of filmmaker Mark Jenkin’s highly repetitive soundtrack on the film’s sense of time. Linear temporality relies on a cause-and-effect syntax: this will lead to that. But what happens when extreme repetition subverts such causality? Does time continue to move forward? Does it stand still? Or does it move into the past?

16:9 filmtidsskrift
Great looking new open access book! https://openbooks.ucp.pt/ucp/catalog/book/195
Revolution & cinema | Open Books da UCP Editora

On Samhain/Halloween/All Hallows Eve, here's a little video I made yesterday - just for the occasion - with my friend and collaborator Professor Lynda Nead (Courtauld Institute), the brilliant scholar of art history, and feminist and British visual cultures. It's a videographic collection and study of the "haunted mirror" sequences in "The Haunted Mirror" segment of 1945 horror classic DEAD OF NIGHT. It's the first video in what we hope will be a co-authored series on this (and other) film(s)!
https://vimeo.com/1024892367?share=copy
The Haunted Mirror

A videographic collection of the "haunted mirror" sequences from "The Haunted Mirror" segment (directed by Robert Hamer) of the portmanteau film…

Vimeo

Very happy that today is publication day for my second videographic entry in the "Screen Stars Dictionary" at Tecmerin journal. It’s a short study of the great Spanish actress Belén Rueda and of how her blondeness is figured as a key part of both her star persona and her particular association with horror cinema. I presented this at a great conference in Madrid back in June, so am thrilled that it will now circulated even more widely. https://vimeo.com/1011928590

Thanks so much to Tecmerin editor Vicente Rodríguez Ortega and Screen Star Dictionary inventor/impresario Ariel Avissar, and all the people who provided help (including Vicki Bennett) and feedback (Ariel, Barbara Zecchi, Colleen Laird and Vicente.
#screenstarsdictionary #film #stars

Belén Rueda. Screen Stars Dictionary. By Catherine Grant (Aarhus Universitet)

Vimeo