Transcultural Montage
International Conference at Moesgaard Estate, University of Aarhus, DK, August 24 to 26, 2009
I am kino-eye. I am a builder. I have placed you, whom Iíve created today, in an extraordinary room which did not exist until just now when I also created it. Dziga Vertov, 1923
Guest speakers:
• Professor George Marcus, University of California
• Professor Bruce Kapferer, University of Bergen
• Dr. Anna Grimshaw, Emory University
• Peter Crawford, University of Tromsø
• Jakob Høgel, Danish Film Institute
• Dr. Stuart McLean, University of Minnesota
• Professor Catherine Russell, Concordia University
This conference focuses on the topic of montage and its possibilities and limitations for moving beyond realist forms of representation in anthropology. In its conventional usage, montage refers to the juxtaposition of shots in the production of film. However, in addition to ethnographic film, this conference also addresses the use of montage in other forms of anthropological communication, such as writing, exhibition making, photography, and video installation. The questions to be explored are the following:
• When and how do particular montage juxtapositions of images, sounds, objects, and words
challenge and enhance our perception and bring us new revelations of the socio-cultural worlds
we inhabit ?
• How may montage be applied to account for the invisible dimensions of human life, e.g., the
invisible in vision, global economic forces, spiritual beings, and psychological conditions ?
• What are the limitations of montage: which cuts and which kinds of montage work to reinforce
rather than transcend stereotypes and commonsense perception ?
• How can different anthropological media, such as film, writing, photography, sound and
exhibition-making be combined through the principle of montage ?
• How and in what ways can realist and radical constructivist forms of writing, film, and museum
display be combined ?
Ranging from polyphonic ethnography to non-linear evocative prose and abstract displacement of concepts, anthropological literature shows a rich tradition of experimentation with what may be characterized as cinematic forms of montage (Marcus 1994). A shared aim of these experiments was to upturn the authoritarian voice of the anthropological author along with its realist claim of offering a one-to-one correspondence between words and world. Similarly, disruptive montage installations or artistic collages have been used to break with the idea of museum display as a direct transmission of reality. In contrast to the display of objects as integrated parts of socio-cultural frameworks, or as props in the naturalist reconstruction of markets, homes, slums etc, the staging of artifacts in seemingly grotesque montage sceneries have aimed at creating verfremdung effects to induce a more reflexive stance towards the worlds produced in museum displays (cf. Gonseth et. al. 2002). Likewise, ethnographic filmmakers have experimented with the creation of kino-fists and montage shocks, but in keeping with the realist ideals of observational cinema, most ethnographic filmmakers nevertheless still regard montage as something that is best minimised (Vaughan 1992, Kiener 2008). Rather than the virtual space-time of montage, the long observational take, which preserves natural duration and imitates ordinary perception, is appreciated for its potential to return our gazes to the particularities of everyday life and the transcultural commonalities of being human. Despite the experiments with various representational forms, realism, along with its model of truth as correspondence, is still a dominating principle - not only in film, but also in anthropological writing and museum work.
But realism has shortcomings that remain unresolved ñ especially when dealing with aspects of human life that are invisible. Such aspects include, quite concretely, the backsides of the objects that we perceive (e.g. the invisible in vision), but also, on a broader scale, our entanglement in global cultural and socio-economic processes as well as the impact of invisible spiritual beings that for many are considered as being on the same level of reality as the visible. The super-real view of montage and the gaps created in the juxtapositions of shots may provide ways of approaching the impact of these invisible dimensions of human reality (Marcus 1994, Kiener 2008). An additional form of invisibility, which may be accounted for through montage, is that invisible face of the Other, which Levinas (1999) argues lies hidden beneath the facial expressions on the forefront of the head. According to Levinas, we may address the otherness of the Other only to the extent that we maintain a fundamental separation of self and Other. If we agree with this argument, it follows that the disruption and dislodging of our commonsense vision must be a precondition for getting a feel for the irreducible being of Others. The deconstructive potential of montage to disrupt our tendency for attributing sameness to difference may be an essential tool in this regard (cf. Strathern 1988).
But where does this lead us? Should the realist correspondence criteria that continue to operate as the validating principle in much anthropological writing, exhibition- and filmmaking be altogether abandoned? Does disruptive montage provide a satisfying alternative? Obviously, realist aesthetics can also be used in the service of disrupting our commonsense perception. Likewise, montage does not necessarily always disrupt our perception, but may equally well be used to reinforce stereotypical understandings of self and others. The question of how to retain a sense of coherence on the one hand while making use of the disruptive effects of montage on the other still appears pivotal and unresolved (Marcus 1994). An aim of this conference, therefore, is to consider the possibilities of combining realist and radical constructivist forms of representation in anthropology.
Call for Abstracts
Deadline: May 1, 2009 We welcome all presentations that relates to the issue of montage in anthropology. A presentation at the conference does not necessarily have to consist in a 'paper' presentation but could also consist in presentation of film excerpts or a performance-based presentation relating to the issue of montage. If you wish to participate in the conference, please send your contact details along with an abstract of max. 300 words no later than May 1, 2009, to Christian Suhr suhr@hum.au.dk Final notification will be received before June 1, 2009.
PhD-workshop on Transcultural Montage
Moesgaard Estate, University of Aarhus, DK, August 27, 2009
• Teachers: Dr. George Marcus and Dr. Bruce Kapferer
• Place: Department of Anthropology and Ethnography, University of Aarhus, Moesgaard 8270 Højbjerg
• Max. number of participants: 10 PhD students
• ECTS: 3 (with paper)
This PhD workshop is organized as part of the conference on "Transcultural Montage" (see above). The PhD workshop invites PhD students who incorporate or wish to incorporate montage principles into their research. PhD students will be asked to make a presentation (paper/film/performance/...) of approximately 20 minutes followed by 20 minutes discussion time. Depending on the media format, either a paper or synopsis should be distributed in advance. Discussions will be led by two discussants: one being either Dr. Bruce Kapferer or Dr. George Marcus and the other one of the PhD participants.
If you wish to participate in the PhD workshop, please send your contact details along with an abstract of max. 300 words no later than May 1, 2009, to Christian Suhr. Final notification will be received before June 1, 2009. Papers (to be distributed among the participants) should be sent no later than August 1.
Contacts
Please direct all enquiries to:
Rane Willerslev
Director of the Ethnographic Collections Moesgaard Museum Tel: +45 8942 4683 / +45 2398 2229 Email: etnorw@hum.au.dk
Christian Suhr
Filmmaker and PhD Candidate Department of Anthropology University of Aarhus Tel: +45 8942 4699 / +45 3160 0031 Email: suhr@hum.au.dk
Getting to Aarhus
Nearest airport is Aarhus Airport. In connection with the majority of flights, there is an airport bus service between Aarhus and Aarhus Airport (50 minutes). Tickets are sold on the bus. Major Credit Cards are accepted.
Another option is to fly to Billund Airport. From here you can also catch a bus to Aarhus (approximately 90 minutes), Billund Airport Bus Service
If you arrive at Aarhus Airport and Billund Airport we will do our best to pick you up in a car.
A third option is to fly to Copenhagen Airport. From Copenhagen Airport there are trains leaving for Aarhus each hour (3 1/2 hours, Journey Planner
From the city center to Moesgaard (conference venue)
Each morning and afternoon there will be a mini-bus from the city center to Moesgaard. In addition bus no. 6 leaves two times each hour from Aarhus to Moesgaard.
Bus no. 6: Banegårdspladsen to Moesgaard (Bus stop in front of the train station) Every hour from 6.00 until 24.00 at xx.18 and xx.48
Bus no. 6: Moesgaard to Banegårdspladsen Every hour from 6.45 until 23.45 at xx.15 and xx.45 Bus no. 6 Timetable
Aarhus Taxa: (+45) 89 48 48 48
About Aarhus
VisitAarhus link to the official travel guide to Århus
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