Eric Kluitenberg on Thu, 15 Jun 2006 16:18:07 +0200 (CEST)
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<nettime-ann> Sat. June 17 - Live Stream: Old Curtains, New Screens - Media, Minorities and Politics in Post-Communist Europe, De Balie, Amsterdam
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- Subject: <nettime-ann> Sat. June 17 - Live Stream: Old Curtains, New Screens - Media, Minorities and Politics in Post-Communist Europe, De Balie, Amsterdam
- From: Eric Kluitenberg <epk@xs4all.nl>
- Date: Thu, 15 Jun 2006 01:18:17 +0200
.
Old Curtains, New Screens
Media, Minorities and Politics in Post-Communist Europe
Symposium and Evening Program
De Balie - Centre for Culture and Politics, Amsterdam.
http://www.debalie.nl
Saturday June 17, 2006.
10.00 – 22.00 hrs
Live-stream at:
http://www.debalie.nl/live
The fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 formally removed the separation
that had divided Europe for decades. The post-Wall landscape has been
quickly transformed by new forms of mediation: changing
infrastructures, technologies, and aesthetic forms that range from
print to mobile phone to satellite television networks. This media
boom has linked the post-communist region to the circulation of
Europe and the globe at large in the last fifteen years.
At the same time, new lines of separation, new curtains are also
visible within policies and representations alike. We are
particularly interested in how ethnic, gender, sexual, and religious
minorities have been affected by the increased post-Wall attention
that has been focused on them, and how they have been able to turn
new media and social technologies into political and representational
tools.
This symposium will bring together leading regional and national
experts in the fields of broadcasting, visual art, new media
activism, and film production to examine recent East and Central
European media and political transformations. All panellists are
involved in both the daily tasks of negotiating policy issues and in
the theoretical work of understanding new identity formations that
are no longer locked into national systems but are inevitably hybrid,
sustained by and actively absorbing transnational affiliations. The
event will be constructed as an interweaving series of engaging and
informative short presentations, discussions, as well as film and
video screenings.
Themes of the symposium and evening program, Saturday June 17, 2006:
Xenophobia and the Emergence of New Media Networks
17 June, 10:30 - 11:15
Tomász Kitlinski focuses on how new forms of xenophobia have
accompanied the emergence of transnational gay, lesbian, and feminist
media networks in Central and Eastern Europe. In the centre of his
presentation is the "sexual dissident," whose coming out introduces a
new voice into post-socialist literature, culture, and activism. The
discourses of official media often dehumanize women and sexual
minorities. Kitlinski addresses these forms of exclusion and the ways
in which the groups involved try to challenge them through mobilizing
new media networks.
Tomász Kitlinski is lecturer in philosophy at the Marie Curie
University, Lublin, Poland. He is the author of The Stranger Is
Within Us (Aureus, 2001), co-author of Love and Democracy:
Reflections on the Homosexual Question in Poland (Aureus, 2005) and
contributed to Our Monica, Ourselves: The Clinton Affair and the
National Interest (New York University Press, 2001). He contributed
to 'New Europe, Old Monsters' and other texts on international and
Polish new media.
Virtual Space and Internet Media:
Self-Representations of East European Women on the Web
17 June, 11:45 - 12:30
Arturas Tereskinas analyzes the visual strategies articulated by
Eastern European women in their internet personals. What issues of
self-representation, gender, body and sexuality do these images
raise? What representational conventions do they employ? Examining
the problems of fantasy, pornography and desire, Tereskinas argues
that through these images women describe and specify not only their
sexualities but also their longings, insecurities, yearnings and
their movement towards new possibilities. Iconography and narrative
of these personals offer imaginary forms of resolution for
contradictions that exist in both Eastern European cultures and
women's lives.
Arturas Tereskinas is Associate Professor of Sociology at Vytauras
Magnus University and Vilnius University, Lithuania. He is the author
of Bodily Signs: Sexuality, Identity and Space in Lithuanian Culture
(2001) and Imperfect Communities: Identity, Discourse and Nation in
the Seventeenth-Century Grand Duchy of Lithuania (2005) and the
editor of Public Lives, Intimate Places: Body, Publicity, and Fantasy
in Contemporary Lithuania (2002) and Men and Fatherhood: New Forms of
Masculinity in Europe (2005, with Jolanta Reingardiene).
The Role of European Institutions in Support of New Media:
The Case of Roma Media
17 June, 12:30 - 13:15
Valeriu Nicolae will discuss the role that European institutions and
NGOs play in supporting media-related projects. He will explicitly
focus on the ways in which Roma media have emerged in post-1989
Europe, and how these media have started both to challenge mass media
and to function as alternative sources of information.
Valeriu Nicolae is secretary-general of ERGO, the European Roma
Grassroots Organizations Network, a network of Roma organizations
from Slovakia, Serbia, Moldova, Bulgaria, Romania and Albania, and an
OSI fellow. From 2003 until March 2006, he was deputy director of
ERIO, the European Roma Information Office in Brussels. He developed
an educational project for Roma children in his hometown Craiova,
Southern Romania.
Ghetto Entertainment:
Mainstream media and Minority Representation
17 June, 14:15 - 15:45
Anikó Imre will address the ways in which films and television
programs that explicitly deal with minority issues have become
central to public debates on minorities. In a case study, Imre will
present a 'close-reading' of the film Nyócker (Hungary, 2004, 90 min)
by the Hungarian director Áron Gauder. Nyócker is an animation movie
on the conflicts between different Hungarian minorities and the
municipality in the eight district of Budapest, commonly known as the
'Roma ghetto'.
Anikó Imre is a postdoctoral fellow at the Amsterdam School for
Cultural Analysis, University of Amsterdam. She has written
extensively on East Central European film and media. She is the
editor of East European Cinema (Routledge, 2005).
Governments versus Art? Art as Alternative Media Space
17 June, 16:15 - 17:00
Pawel Leszkowicz will look at the ways in which artistic
representation functions as an alternative medium that
counterbalances the one-dimensional gender structure of the official,
often still state-supported media. The range of images of sexuality
and gender projected by contemporary art might function as an opening
into the hidden history of Polish subjectivity and society,
supplementing and enriching the dominant media sphere.
Pawel Leszkowicz is lecturer in Contemporary Art and curator at the
Department of Art History, Adam Mickiewicz University Poznan, Poland.
He is the author of The Iconography of Subjectivity: Helen Chadwick
(Aureus, 2001), co-author of Love and Democracy: Reflections on the
Homosexual Question in Poland (Aureus, 2005) and contributed to Our
Monica, Ourselves: The Clinton Affair and the National Interest (New
York University Press, 2001). He contributed to Polish feminist and
gay collections and magazines, and curated the art exhibition Love
and Democracy.
Special Evening Program:
Timescapes by Angela Melitopoulos
17 June, 20:00 - 22:00
Timescapes is a collective video project based in South-Eastern
Europe that explores collective memory in video imagery and new forms
of filmic representation through the possibilities of non-linear
editing via the Internet. Timescapes' basis is a database built by
five video artists/activists from Cologne (Angela Melitopoulos),
Berlin (Hito Steyerl), Belgrade (Dragana Zarevac), Athens (Freddy
Viannelis), and Ankara (Videa: media collective) who shaped different
subject matters on the theme of mobility and migration-and memories
thereof-in so-called "B-Zone territories" in South-Eastern Europe and
Turkey. Angela Melitopoulos will discuss and screen her contribution
to Timescapes, the artistic road movie "Corridor X".
Angela Melitopoulos is a video artist from Cologne, Germany. She
studied fine arts at the Academy of Arts in Düsseldorf with Nam June
Paik. She has worked with electronic media since 1986 and has
experimented with single-channel-tapes, video installations, video
essays and documentaries. Her video essay Passing Drama (1999) has
won several prizes, among which the Prize of the Council of Europe
(2000). Timescapes was exhibited as part of a larger exhibition on B-
Zone: Becoming Europe and Beyond at Kunstwerke Berlin earlier this year.
Film Program De Balie Cinema - 16 and 17 June
Special event
On 16 and 17 June De Balie Cinema will show the documentary The
Danube Exodus by the Hungarian filmmaker Péter Forgács (A Dunai
Exodus, Hungary, 1998, 60 min). Time: 20:15.
On 16 June the German film critic Jörg Taszman will interview Péter
Forgács, and moderate a discussion with him and the audience.
Péter Forgács is a leading practitioner of 'found footage'
filmmaking. Home movies and amateur films in particular serve as the
sources from which he composes his stories. The Danube Exodus is a
travelogue documenting the Jewish exodus from Slovakia just before
the beginning of the Second World War. In two ships, a group of 900
Slovak and Austrian Jews try to reach the Black Sea via the Danube,
and from there to go to Palestine. Forgács based his film on the
amateur films made by the captain of one of the ships, Nándor
Andrásovits. He filmed his passengers while they prayed, slept, and
even got married. At the end of this journey, it becomes clear that
the boat will not return empty: in an historical paradox, a reverse
exodus takes place, this time the repatriation of Bessarabian
Germans, fleeing to the Third Reich because of the Soviet invasion of
Bessarabia. A fascinating personal and historical document.
Jörg Taszman grew up in East Berlin and Paris, finished the Budapest
Film School in 1991 and lives in Berlin. He works as a journalist and
film critic specialized in East European cinema.
Live Stream:
The program on Satruday June 17 can be followed live via:
http://www.debalie.nl/live
The live webcast will later be made available in the Balie on-line
archive.
Organisers:
Old Curtains, New Screens is organized by the NWO Research group
Globalization and the Transformation of Cultural Identities in
Central and Eastern Europe (Amsterdam School for Cultural Analysis,
University of Amsterdam), De Balie, The Netherlands Organization for
Scientific Research (NWO), the Faculty of the Arts at the Vrije
Universiteit Amsterdam, and Architecturalia.
De Balie, Kleine-Gartmanplantsoen 10 (near Leidseplein), Amsterdam.
http://www.debalie.nl/media
Entrée fee Symposium, 17 June: 5 euro (day progam); 5 euro (evening
program); 7,50 euro (both).
Language: English.
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