[in]Transition journal launch at SCMS 2014, Seattle: Part 1
1 2016-05-31T01:20:36-07:00 Miklos Kiss bab68bf9457e82557cb440971c8c3307eac46327 8115 1 The website was officially launched on March 20th, 2014, as “the first [online] peer-reviewed academic journal of videographic film and moving image studies”, broadcasted live during a dedicated panel of that year’s SCMS conference in Seattle. plain 2016-05-31T01:20:36-07:00 Critical Commons 2014 Video Live Show [Procaster] Thu Mar 20 2014 11:57:51 AM SCMS 2016-05-31T08:09:15Z Miklos Kiss bab68bf9457e82557cb440971c8c3307eac46327This page is referenced by:
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The web and the video essay
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Shortly after amendments were made to the fair use discussion concerning audiovisual materials, the online video essay started coming into fruition. Around this time, technological means for broadband Internet connection, video production, editing, distribution, and
annotation had become exceedingly attainable. Still, it was relatively early, in 2007, when film critic Kevin B. Lee started ‘Shooting Down Pictures’ – a website dedicated to his efforts watching “every film of the list of 1000 greatest films of all time, as compiled by They Shoot Pictures, Don’t They?”. To keep track of his project, Lee wrote blog posts and started sharing video excerpts on his YouTube channel from the films he watched. On April 24th, he uploaded a video with the title While the City Sleeps, accompanied by a description that read “Video essay on While The City Sleeps (1956, Fritz Lang).paratextual Shooting Down Pictures: shooting.alsolikelife.com”. The 5’51” video features a compilation of assorted footage from Lang’s film noir, during which Lee provides general comments via voice-over.From
This early video essay already demonstrates the format that most of the upcoming videos would adopt in the following years: the opening of the video only presents an enticing shot, after which we see the film’s title-card, followed by a voice-over. The film’s synopsis , and then the applied focal point is introduced, which serves as the subject of the video. The voice-over delivers commentary that only roughly corresponds to what can be seen on screen at that specific time. Strategies that are customary in today’s practice, such as snappy (contrapuntal) editing of commentary and images, are wholly absent here; both voice-over and footageis recounted general comments and approximate impressions, without a real thesis, method, or conclusion. Coherence between commentary and visuals is loose, and the pacing is relatively slowdemonstrate [39] While spartan in its execution, Lee’s video is highly informative and provides a personally argued access to the film within six minutes, which was then a novelty. More trailblazing attempts from Lee would follow until about a year later when the term ‘video essay’ first appears in the title of the video Shooting Down Pictures #933: Evil Dead 2 Video Essay (though this labeling would not be followed up consistently for some time). [40. ]
Later video uploads would range from scenes and excerpts to analyses that mirror traditional DVD audio commentary, like a casual discussion between Keith Uhlich and Lee that is clearly recorded while the scene played out as featured in the Shooting Down Pictures #937: Posto – Sequence Analyses video.Il
By making a guest appearance on Lee’s YouTube channel in 2008, film critic Matt Zoller Seitz debuts with a two-part essay on Raoul Walsh’s 1941 classic They Died with Their Boots On: They Died with Their Boots On w/ Matt Zoller Seitz.
Shortly after Seitz would produce a video series for Moving Image Source, initially together with Lee (on the season 1 credit sequence of David Simon’s The Wire: Extra Credit, Part 1, and the by now classic The Substance of Style series on Wes Anderson’s cinema), and later on his own [41] Lately Seitz himself became more productive; his videos have begun to take shape of close readings and efforts to trace formal and aesthetic tendencies..
Safe to say, these initiatives mark the inception of the video essay, as we currently know it. Yet, aside from videos from Seitz in 2009 and 2010, Lee would be alone for some time. Only around and after Matthias Stork’s three-part theorization of Cinema (Part 1, Part 2, Part 3) in 2011 would we begin to see more videos, by more authors, in more diverse forms. In addition, Lee’s efforts would show more sophistication in later years, and upgrade earlier modes of formal breakdowns that can now do what, for instance, Bellour intended to achieve in both ‘The Obvious and the Code’, as well as in ‘The Unattainable Text’ in 1973 and 1975, respectively (see, for example, Lee’s 2008 close spatial analysis of Paul Thomas Anderson’s shot techniques: The Career of Paul Thomas Anderson in Five Shots - also [Figure 9]).Chaos
From then on, thanks to a multiplicity of authors, the shapes and sizes of video essays would evolve, although the hard-core of video essayists would remain relatively stable, as we will point out in Chapter II.
Within the context of institutionalized education, English and Film Studies professor Eric Faden was relatively early to catch on this forming tendency when he wrote ‘A Manifesto For Critical Media.’ As early as in 2008, in a rather determined proclamation, he declared to give up on film analysis altogether, and to invest his hopes and efforts intowritten work:mediatized
In Faden’sI’m so convinced by this new form’s
that I, Eric Faden, hereby renounce my earthly, traditional, literary-bound scholarly practices. I vow to abstain from that mostadvantages restricted of intellectual practices – thesacred but essay – no matter the temptation. From here forward I put my faith in media over text, screen over paper. Thus, this is the last essay I’ll ever write. (Faden 2008)literary academic can see the inception of awriting we school dominating current video essay production, namely the one that challenges traditional scholarly work. Similar to Catherine Grant, who advocates the video essay as ‘thought new’ scholarly form (Grant 2014), Faden writes that “[tontologically ] scholarship aspires to exhaustion (…). The mediaraditional , by contrast, suggests possibilities” – which echoes the problems with hypertexts, as well as the (ambiguous) statements made instylo of personal documentary and essay film. Remarkably, passion and enthusiastic creativity may provide an indirect indication of why audiovisual work in Film Studies is relatively underdeveloped, at least from an academic, explanatory and argumentatively sound point of view: at the advent of newfavour possibilities, excitement over the novelty of medium specificity and about unusualmedial momentarily trumps respect for more traditional academic merits (this is one of the core concerns addressed in Chapter III). Rephrasing Tom Gunning’s seminal take on early filmaffordances in a ‘Cinema of Attractions’ (Gunning 2000 [1986]), it seems that we live in the age that could be described as an era of the ‘audiovisual essay of attractions’. Gunning writes about early practitioners’ “fascination with the potential of a [new visual] medium” (229). This lureproduction resulting with recent academic tendencies, as it seems that experimenting with fresh aesthetic and technical approaches is just ‘too attractive’ and may suppress established scholarly values. This way, one can find similar problems as when enthusiasm about hypertext’s associative and technical potential outweighed time-tested rhetoric of conventional research for those dabbling with this novelty. The inherent allure and practicalrhymes of theperformativity form too easily become a substitute for critical argument, as much as they may enable those arguments to be articulated ever more potently. Of course, one should not aspire to conservatism, and yes, potent audiovisual essaying allows and also requires some creativity (which may not be for everyone). However, at least in the scholarly context, one must keep an eye out for securing a certain amount of validity, in terms of academic soundness and subjection to evaluation criteria, as well as means to prevent overzealous naiveté.audiovisual gave voice to similar reservations:Lavik
Indeed, the emerging trend’s disregard or disinterest in the historical context (or ‘evolution’) of Film Studies is somewhat concerning. As Andrew notes, “a discipline needs to see current work in relation to the momentum of prior study, just as it needs to look forward to the advancements that graduate students will make when they take up the reins” (Andrew 2009, 884). Again,I find that [audiovisual film criticism] adopts too readily the conceptual abstractionism of the artistic avant-garde, and does not strive hard enough to preserve the particular competencies of film scholars as scholars: the ability to just engage with complex thought, but to pull it into focus, and to articulate and communicate those ideas clearly. (
2012)Lavik look forward is there, without question, but the relation to prior work and established criteria is often underdeveloped and uncritical. In terms of building on and incorporating a theoretical foundation, the tradition of Film Studies is regarded as either problematic or simply irrelevant – which, we argue, it both should not be, at least not by default. One of the ways we can remedy this development is by paying attention to the way video essays are employed in the classroom. The case we hope to have made after Chapter III is that current progressive-minded educators might want to look back on the theoretical tradition a bit more, and that traditionally minded faculties might want to open up their ideas to new means of – audiovisual – scholarship. The first group may benefit from feeding more established modes of research into their new and creative audiovisual explorations, while, alternatively, those who still consider the written word superior may have to reconsider the primacy of their practices. Fortunately, classroom experience with video essays is starting to prompt articles, or video essays for that matter, where educators attempt to define the best ways of teaching audiovisual research practices. Still, finding writings or practical guidelines for how to produce videos is scarce or at least theoretically thin (see the very useful but quite basic How-to Video Essays guide by Greer Fyfe and Miriam Ross) and measurements for evaluation are rather underdeveloped (the for exceptions, see Kelli Marshall’s attempt to create a sample Grade Sheet, and our brief plea for finding well-defined criteria to the new form in order to make it a verifiable scholarly medium – see Kiss 2014). Similar feats can be found in online journals calling for videos, whereas of evaluation are also currently pending (more to come on this in Chapters II and III).criteria
As mentioned in the Introduction, online platforms are adapting to video content more and more. Online scholarship is not new in the sense that there has already been a gradual shift where printed paper has been substituted for a screen. However, we would like to see a more optimized ‘graduation’ of that screen, as it were. Out of our everyday experience as digital consumers, we can agree with Eric sees written scholarship being presented on a screen as “the same dense content only now more difficult to read” (2008). Video on an online platform presented onFaden who is a new way of producing and displaying information, which subsequently calls for a new way of quality control and exhibition practice.screens
To date, the most professionalized and academically controlled effort to pull Film Studies in video form takes place on MediaCommon’s online cinema journal project [in Transition. The website was officially launched on March 20th, 2014, as “the first [online] peer-reviewed academic journal of] and moving image studies”, broadcasted live during a dedicated panel of that year’s SCMS conference in Seattle – the archived stream is broken up into two videos on the SCMS website: Part 1 (Becker, Morton) and Part 2 (Morton, Grant, Stork, Sampson).videographic film
The idea behind establishing such a journal was to offer a platform where the above-mentioned problems were to be overcome: to attain quality control through selection and introduction. For the first four done byissues this was curators, and recently byappointed (on a non-anonymous basis, selected from the members of the journal’s Editorial Board). The SCMS panel featured a group of people that decided to pull their recourses together and launch a single comprehensive website: Christine Becker, Drew Morton, Catherine Grant, Matthias Stork and Benjamin Sampson. Overall, during the panel it became apparent that the discussion surrounding audiovisual scholarship is one that needs to concern itself with production as well as evaluation and publishing. Especially Catherine Grant was up front about the uncertainty that is currently topical. As she relayed, “we don’t know what the relationship between length and substance is yet. We don’t know what the relationship between form and substance is yet” (see around 7:30assigned reviewers Part 2).into -
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Regarding the ontology of the video essay
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A panel discussion on the video essay took place at Ebertfest 2013.
The panel featured an array of critics and scholars, including Kevin B. Lee, Pablo Villaça, Matt Zoller Seitz, and David Bordwell. When Bordwell was asked to briefly define the video essay, he suggested that it is an “ill-defined genre”, made up of “think pieces” that followed from a literary tradition of opinion and reports; principles of which were then transposed onto other media like photography, and now found their way to video. He noted the form is based around “meditating and reflecting” and “may have an argument, may have something that is more associative, [but is] always an effort to engage an audience with ideas, and the author’s personal take on these ideas” (at around 02:40 – 03:48). The ensuing discussion lingered on the poetics and purpose of the format, as well as copyright issues. In general, it became evident that the current disposition toward the possibilities of producing Videographic Film Studies is dominantly geared at spreading and sharing film appreciation. The practical results of the combination of such creative enthusiasm, paired with lack of theoretical control, are that the current practice consists largely of open-ended videos, where the author’s exploratory efforts often trump informational quality,explorative traceability , and at times even legibility, much in the vein of the personal essay.
When [in Transition, the joint platform of MediaCommons and Cinema Journal, launched in 2014, another international panel discussion on the topic of the video essay took place.]
The panel again consisted of both critics and scholars, this time featuring Matthias Stork, Catherine Grant, and Drew Morton. Despite the more hands-on and forward-looking talks during this particular discussion (about a year after the Ebertfest-panel), the same tendencies proved dominant: uncertainties withregards to conduct were outspoken, as well as arguments favoring ‘poetic’ videos withemphasis on associative creativity. Similar to when his videos first surfaced, Stork stood out with his capacity for reflection on the current position and future possibilities of the form. Firstly, Stork rightfully addressed how the field of video essays has been dominated by a group of ‘usual suspects’, and consequently mused on the discrepancy between a supposed “digital revolution” and a reality where only a handful are taking the reins (Part 2, at around 33:30). He was also keen to note that “the medium is inherently and substantially technological”, that “we need to offer more classes, and document them”, and “curate [a] selection of how-to-guides” to show “the techniques, and […] how we can put them to use” (ibid , 34:00; 35:50; 36:30).
All things considered, current video essays often disregard written theory and reference only films or other video essays. In turn, written theory refers to films and written theory, but not video essays. From both vantage points, theorists are missing out on productive insights that could strengthen their arguments, regardless of the medium they are adopting. Perhaps the discrepancy between an established written tradition and the prepubescentvideographic paradigm is what generates and maintains the gap. While in the writtentradition there are more lucid ways of recognizing and assessing different writing genres, such discussions aboutvideographic film culture still seem shrouded in foggy definitions.
At the Ebertfest-discussion, Matt Zoller Seitz introduced the distinction between personal and analytical categories, and stated that “the most powerful” videos are those that encompass both these qualities (Ebertfest 2013 video, at around 51:00). This might be true; however, from a scholarly point of view, we would argue to look more in the direction of a dichotomy tested by Morton, namely poetic versus argumentative, the very semantics of which indicate the constructive principles of a video rather than the approach taken (as with personal/analytical). Though the definitions are not fully developed, the distinction poignantly reveals the two polar-opposites of the rhetorical and aesthetic pillars of Videographic Film Studies.
We believe it is important to safeguard the freshly-forming standards of Videographic Film Studies, particularly while it is still growing. One way to do so is to closely monitor and discriminate the ways in which current produce is presented, referenced, andcontextualized . Over time, we are sure that thestylings adhering to different genres will come more and more into their own, but in themeantime we have to take into consideration that video is a medium that needs to bestylized even on a technological level: there are no guidelines yet that are analogous to the ‘baked in’ nature of footers, headers and footnotes as with text, let alone screen positions and proportionsfor layout elements, visuals, text and the interplay of audio. The mere process of formulating hypothetical ideals will create demarcations for the actual videos to fit in or spill over.