CfP: The Second Birth of Cinema: A Centenary Conference

The Second Birth of Cinema: A Centenary Conference
Percy Building, Newcastle University, 1-2 July 2011
Keynote speakers: André Gaudreault & Philippe Marion, Ian Christie, Joe Kember
Deadline for abstracts: 30 September 2010

This conference commemorates cinema’s ‘second birth’, the historical developments and
departures that broke cinema’s subordination to other media to give us the medium, the
industry and the building that we know as ‘the cinema’.

If, as André Gaudreault and Philippe Marion have recently insisted, cinema was born once
as a technology and then again as a medium, just when and how did this occur? What
caused film practice, the film business and film discourse all to generate a media
identity for cinema? How did we get from ‘animated photography’ to ‘the pictures’?

Possible questions to consider:
Was cinema’s ‘second birth’ a radical short-term event or a gradual and imperceptible
change? What was the most significant cause? Was this ‘second birth’ a matter of
maturation or deliberate manipulation? What people and organisations were most
instrumental in bringing it about, and how did it vary from country to country? How
extensively was cinema’s audience contract re-written? What kinds of genealogies were
invented for cinema, what genealogies were forgotten, and what genealogies were actively
disavowed? Was cinema drafted into bourgeois culture, or did it fashion its own unique
identity? Did this period create a lasting identity card for cinema, or were third and
fourth births still to come? How did contemporaries register this change? How early did
the process of reinventing cinema begin, and when, if ever, did it end? And what date
stands out as the watershed? Indeed, was 2011 a good choice for the centennial year?

Abstracts are invited for 20-minute papers on any aspect of this ‘event’ in any part of
the world. Please send abstracts, by email attachment, to Andrew Shail at
a.e.shail AT ncl.ac.uk, with the subject line ‘Second Birth of Cinema’, by the 30th of
September 2010.