社论

IF 0.3 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Italianist Pub Date : 2021-05-04 DOI:10.1080/02614340.2021.1976531
Danielle E. Hipkins, Elena Past, M. Seger
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This has been a togetherness recognised in both practice and absence, as those of us who were able to do so stayed safely in our homes. Often, we found ourselves tucked behind screens, learning new ways to stay connected as we carried on with our work as scholars and teachers – adapting lesson plans, reaching out to far-flung archives for digital materials, binging on all manner of media, and sharing notes with colleagues over Zoom lunches and happy hours. Through all of it, we have both yearned for and relied on the process of collaboration, the theme of this current issue. In emphasising collaboration, we take inspiration from and reach out in conversation to our editorial colleagues at gender/sexuality/italy, whose recently published issue no. 7 (2020) is also dedicated to ‘collaborations’. In the call for papers for that issue, the editors of g/s/i offered a series of useful handles for thinking through the substance of collaboration, so often taken for granted as an alchemical process beyond analysis; they asked how affect and performativity, for example, might structure our understanding of collaboration, and posited collaboration as an explicitly decolonising and feminist practice. With this issue of The Italianist we seek to extend those lines of inquiry to think about ways in which the screen industry prompts uniquely collaborative forms of production (and consumption and distribution), as well as scholarship and pedagogy. Making screen narrative is defined by its collaboratory nature: from production and fundraising, through scriptwriting and casting, to coaching and performance, costume and location scouting, camerawork, sound and editing, the multiple stages that are interwoven into the complex process put individuals into close and intricate interdependency. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

尽管新冠肺炎的影响在世界各地明显不平等,但自2020年初以来,大流行和社会隔离的试验几乎影响了全球每个社区,带来了许多教训。随着一些国家和社区开始暂时摆脱病毒造成的破坏,以及它所带来的社会警告,我们有机会评估失去了什么,学到了什么。在过去几个月的必要隔离中出现的一个主题是团结的重要性:团结起来应对健康危机,为陷入困境的邻居提供资源,为平等机会和社会正义发声,并继续开展教育、智力探索和情感联系的重要工作。这是一种在训练和缺席中都得到认可的团结,因为我们这些能够做到这一点的人都安全地呆在家里。通常,我们发现自己被藏在屏幕后面,在继续作为学者和教师的工作时,学习保持联系的新方法——调整课程计划,接触广泛的数字材料档案,沉迷于各种媒体,并在Zoom午餐和欢乐时光中与同事分享笔记。在这一切中,我们都渴望并依赖合作进程,这是当前问题的主题。在强调合作的过程中,我们从《性别/性/意大利》杂志的编辑同事那里获得灵感,并与他们进行对话,该杂志最近出版的第7期(2020)也致力于“合作”。在为这一问题征集论文的过程中,g/s/i的编辑们提供了一系列有用的方法来思考合作的实质,这通常被视为一种超越分析的炼金术过程;例如,他们询问情感和表演性如何构建我们对合作的理解,并将合作视为一种明确的非殖民化和女权主义实践。通过这期《意大利主义者》,我们试图扩展这些调查范围,思考屏幕行业如何促进独特的合作生产形式(以及消费和分销),以及学术和教育学。制作银幕叙事是由其合作性质决定的:从制作和筹款,到编剧和选角,再到指导和表演,服装和外景侦察,摄影,声音和剪辑,交织在复杂过程中的多个阶段使个人处于紧密而复杂的相互依存关系中。对电影和电视进行研究也可能是一个高度协作的过程,越来越多的学者团体正在汇集资源,管理对电影史或媒体运营的大规模调查。在《意大利主义者》的这期特刊中,我们在一系列反思性文章和一系列“对话”中,从实践和理论上调查了这两个“共同实验室”,即电影制作和通过电影进行研究或教学。虽然合作可以排除尽可能多的内容,使其运营成为软实力的一种重要且未经充分审查的表现,但我们将“联合实验室”理解为两个或两个以上从业者或研究人员之间的对话中开辟的空间,允许实验和交流、游戏以及
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Editorial
While the effects of COVID-19 have been glaringly unequal throughout the world, the trials of pandemic and social isolation have touched nearly every community around the globe since early 2020, bringing with them many lessons. As some countries and communities begin tentatively to emerge from the devastation inflicted by the virus, as well as the social cautions it has warranted, we have the opportunity to take stock of what was lost, and what was learned. One theme that emerges from the necessary isolation of these past many months is the importance of togetherness: of banding together to combat health crises, to provide resources to struggling neighbours, to speak up for equal access and social justice, and to continue doing the important work of education, intellectual exploration, and affective connection. This has been a togetherness recognised in both practice and absence, as those of us who were able to do so stayed safely in our homes. Often, we found ourselves tucked behind screens, learning new ways to stay connected as we carried on with our work as scholars and teachers – adapting lesson plans, reaching out to far-flung archives for digital materials, binging on all manner of media, and sharing notes with colleagues over Zoom lunches and happy hours. Through all of it, we have both yearned for and relied on the process of collaboration, the theme of this current issue. In emphasising collaboration, we take inspiration from and reach out in conversation to our editorial colleagues at gender/sexuality/italy, whose recently published issue no. 7 (2020) is also dedicated to ‘collaborations’. In the call for papers for that issue, the editors of g/s/i offered a series of useful handles for thinking through the substance of collaboration, so often taken for granted as an alchemical process beyond analysis; they asked how affect and performativity, for example, might structure our understanding of collaboration, and posited collaboration as an explicitly decolonising and feminist practice. With this issue of The Italianist we seek to extend those lines of inquiry to think about ways in which the screen industry prompts uniquely collaborative forms of production (and consumption and distribution), as well as scholarship and pedagogy. Making screen narrative is defined by its collaboratory nature: from production and fundraising, through scriptwriting and casting, to coaching and performance, costume and location scouting, camerawork, sound and editing, the multiple stages that are interwoven into the complex process put individuals into close and intricate interdependency. Conducting research on films and television can also be a highly collaborative process, and increasingly, groups of scholars are pooling resources to manage large-scale investigations into film history or media operations. With this special issue of The Italianist we investigate these two ‘co-laboratories’, of film-making and of researching or teaching through film, both as practice and in theory, in a set of reflective essays followed by a collection of ‘conversations’. Whilst collaboration can exclude as much as it includes, making its operations a significant, and under-examined, manifestation of soft power, we understand the ‘co-laboratory’ as the space opened up in the dialogue between two or more practitioners or researchers that allows for experiment and exchange, play and possibility to
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来源期刊
Italianist
Italianist HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
11
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