BA (First Class Honours) in Film and TV Production
Bachelor's Degree
Status | Complete |
---|---|
Part Time | No |
Years | 2009 - 2011 |
BA (First Class Honours) in Film and TV Production
Bachelor's Degree
Status Complete Part Time No Years 2009 - 2011
Postgraduate Certificate in Academic Practice
Postgraduate Certificate in Education (PGCE)
Status Complete Part Time No Years 2020 - 2021
Master of Studies in Film Aesthetics
Master's Degree
Status Complete Part Time No Years 2012 - 2013
PhD in Media and Performance
Doctor of Philosophy
Status Complete Part Time No Years 2015 - 2019 Project Title Affective Cinema: Between Style, Chance and the Moving Body Project Description Affective Cinema is a practice research project in film, informed by art cinema and experimental film traditions, and by conceptual fields derived from film theory and philosophy (specifically film ontology, and the philosophy of Deleuze, Bergson and Barthes). The primary outcome of the research is a series of short films, or ‘Affective Signs’, which are structured on the basis of affective significance – an original concept identified in various film moments from the history of cinema, and subsequently developed through the project. Affective significance is a sense of meaning that is felt before it can be thought: it eludes language, and transgresses the boundaries of traditional knowledge and (inter-subjective) communication. Affective significance is produced by chance being captured and revealed on film, in combination with stylistic aspects and decisions that do not coherently assimilate these flashes of contingency into the film’s ordinary signification, but instead amplify their nonhuman origin in the real outside of the human world of reason, concepts and understanding. Through experimenting with film performance, and its ability to expose the nonhuman nature of the moving body as the real (below the human surface of intention, self-control, subjectivity, and meaningful gestures), the sense of affective significance can be
amplified, when combined with the aforementioned aspects of style and chance.
The research expands the potential of cinema by producing experimental film structures in which affective significance can be identified, and by analysing and describing the methodological and aesthetic conditions needed for it to arise. In the process, both established and new methods of film production are tested, and formulated into an applicable set of approaches to filmmaking, cinematography and directing performers. Furthermore, the research contributes to the ontological understanding of film by
defining the conceptual field surrounding affective significance, which is rooted in established film scholarship on affect, semiotics and the movement/stillness paradox of film, but also uniquely acquired through and embedded in practice.Awarding Institution The University of Salford Thesis Affective cinema : between style, chance and the moving body
About USIR
Administrator e-mail: library-research@salford.ac.uk
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