The Body, the Film, the Archive and the Monster
dc.contributor.advisor | Lemay, Yvon | |
dc.contributor.advisor | Habib, André | |
dc.contributor.author | Winand, Annaëlle | |
dc.date.accessioned | 2016-04-01T14:00:30Z | |
dc.date.available | 2016-04-01T14:00:30Z | |
dc.date.issued | 2016-03-31 | |
dc.identifier.uri | http://hdl.handle.net/1866/13388 | |
dc.subject | archive | fr |
dc.subject | archives | fr |
dc.subject | experimental film | fr |
dc.subject | cinéma experimental | fr |
dc.subject | found footage | fr |
dc.subject | cinéma de réemploi | fr |
dc.subject | Nicolas Provost | fr |
dc.subject | Bill Morrison | fr |
dc.subject | monster | fr |
dc.subject | monstre | fr |
dc.title | The Body, the Film, the Archive and the Monster | fr |
dc.type | Travail étudiant / Student work | |
etd.degree.discipline | Sciences de l'information | fr |
etd.degree.grantor | Université de Montréal | fr |
etd.degree.name | Ph. D. | fr |
dcterms.abstract | In the digital age, the body of the film resonates as a new cinematic experience. Digital angst is represented by “archival excess” and brings researchers back to the core object of their disciplines: the film and the archive. Far from weighing down this argument, some artists are playing with the materiality of analogue film as much as they work on the virtual materiality of digital films. These works incarnate some kind of monstrous knowledge, at the fringe of sublime and dread, and reminding us of the film as an archive, as a cinematic and affective body, ruled by a physical, technical and institutional realm. | fr |
dcterms.description | Paper presented during the roundtable “The Exquisite Corpus: Film Heritage and Found Footage Films. Passing Through/Across Medias and Film Bodies” at the XIV MAGIS – Gorizia International Film Studies Spring School in Gorizia, Italy, March 9-15 2016 | fr |
dcterms.language | eng | fr |
UdeM.cycle | Études aux cycles supérieurs / Graduate studies |
Files in this item
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
This document disseminated on Papyrus is the exclusive property of the copyright holders and is protected by the Copyright Act (R.S.C. 1985, c. C-42). It may be used for fair dealing and non-commercial purposes, for private study or research, criticism and review as provided by law. For any other use, written authorization from the copyright holders is required.