BAFTSS Practice Research SIG Seminar:

Videographic Film Criticism

The BAFTSS Practice Research SIG presents a seminar exploring Videographic Film Criticism as practice research

About this event

The BAFTSS Practice Research SIG, in association with the UWE Moving Image Research Group, presents the third in a series of seminars exploring how academic filmmakers situate their practice as research.

In this seminar, we explore the emerging field of videographic film criticism with two examples:

NO VOIDING TIME: A Deformative Videoessay – Alan O’Leary

Deformative criticism is a playful approach to film analysis that creates a new aesthetic object from the film being analysed. No Voiding Time creates an absurdist artefact from Inherent Vice (2014) in order to foreground the film’s sensorium.

Peaky Perspectives on Class Portrayal: from Benefits Street to Downton Abbey – Jemma Saunders

A short videographic study in which multiscreen composition is utilised to explore contrasting portrayals of social class, with Peaky Blinders as a central focus’

BAFTSS Practice Research SIG Seminar Series

We had planned a one-day symposium last June which had to be cancelled due to the pandemic, and this has now evolved into a series of online events celebrating filmmaking in the academy. These events are intended to create a safe space for dialogue between the filmmakers and the wider (academic) community to explore how their practice can be articulated as research (“new knowledge effectively shared”) in the context of funding and research assessment criteria.

Other Events in this Series

Family and Autoethnography – Wed, 25 Nov 2020

Documentary Methodologies – Wed 2 December 2020

Exploding the Container – Wed 20 Jan 2021

It is hoped that the practice work, statements and the resulting conversations could be written up and submitted as a strand to BAFTSS online journal Open Screens.

Credits

BAFTSS Practice Research SIG champions practice research within the field of film, television and screen studies. Practice research is an established academic area which has demonstrated an impactful contribution to the field, both within the REF and research council funded projects. This group focuses on building on these foundations, exploring how screen media practice research can be developed within BAFTSS. The group aims to disseminate practice research and evaluate how practice can contribute new knowledge to the field in terms of its significance, originality and rigour. The group also explores innovative methods of academic dissemination and peer review; as well as the potential of practice research for public engagement and impact.

BAFTSS is the subject association for Film, Television and Screen Studies, championing pedagogy, research into and critical analysis of screen-based media, which we believe are central to understanding the culture, society and economy of the new century. BAFTSS exists to:

  • promote the recognition of the discipline and represent the academic and professorial interests of those engaged in it to the academy, government, funding agencies, the cultural industries and the public;
  • encourage best teaching and research practice;
  • promote the training of postgraduate students in research;
  • give researchers and practitioners the opportunity to attend and present a paper at the annual BAFTSS conference.

This event is supported by the Moving Image Research Group and the Digital Cultures Research Centre, UWE Bristol.

 BAFTSS Practice Research SIG Seminar: Family and Autoethnography image
 BAFTSS Practice Research SIG Seminar: Family and Autoethnography image