Pourquoi ce travail est dans la base
Une base qui oublie comment elle a trouvé un travail ne peut pas être vérifiée. Voici les voies qui ont admis celui-ci.
Notice bibliographique
Résumé
Though this editorial was written at a time of setting clocks back an hour, that is not the kind of change referenced in the title here. Rather, it has to do with changes in the world—of film, politics, nationalism, warfare, climate threats; written when the massive conscription of Russian men began in earnest, when Ukraine doubled down on defense/offense, when Putin threatened nuclear bombing, when Italy elected a fascist leader, when Bolsonaro and Lula battled it out in the Brazilian presidential election, when massive hurricanes hit the Caribbean and the Florida coast—and when Russia announced it would boycott the Oscars (that’s the film tie-in).These are fraught days. As I have written in this space too often, it’s past time for filmmakers, curators, producers, exhibitors, distributors, and online platforms to step up to the demands of their historic moment, stop proceeding on automatic pilot, and summon the courage to offer visions of a different future. For scholars, in turn, it is time to accelerate the development of new analytic tools and rhetorical strategies to cope with unprecedented challenges.How to initiate such a conversation? For a start, the Nobel Prize in Literature was awarded in October to French writer Annie Ernaux, whose books have been made into films several times, most recently with Audrey Diwan’s L’événement (Happening), a powerful abortion-rights drama set in the sixties and based on Ernaux’s own abortion when she was a college student. Drawing on the working-class milieu of her youth in northeastern France, she has courageously followed her own instincts through the years. There are countless other books and authors, though, waiting to be adapted into fearless films to inspire a better society.For just such inspiration, one could do worse than read the words of ten writers—Tetyana Ogarkova, Yuval Noah Harari, Alim Aliev, Philippe Sands, Rachel Clarke, Samar Yazbek, Volodymyr Yermolenko, Victoria Amelina, Oleksandr Mykhed, and Margaret MacMillan—gathered internationally for the Lviv BookForum (in partnership with the Hay Festival), whose thoughts on the challenges of the day were printed in The Guardian.1 In her contribution, “Books Can Help Us Understand War,” MacMillan, a Canadian history lecturer at Oxford, wrote, in part:War makes us confront our own mortality as well as the best and the worst in human nature. Books can help us understand. In the first world war ordinary French soldiers ordered copies of Tolstoy’s War and Peace to try to make sense of their grinding war in the trenches. Or we can escape, at least in our imaginations, our own wars. In the second world war two of the most popular books in English were Richard Llewellyn’s How Green Was My Valley, about lives and sorrows in a declining Welsh mining town and Ernest Hemingway’s For Whom the Bell Tolls, about that earlier great war. You may love or hate Antoine de Saint-Exupéry’s fable The Little Prince, published in the dark days of 1943 and one of the world’s best-sellers of all time. While it ends in the death of the wandering prince it also promises that wisdom can be found and love may, in the end, triumph. Hope matters too.For cinema today, the questions reverberate. The task of escaping is well taken care of. But to make sense of the wars of today, both military and economic? That task still awaits its champions.On September 17, 2022, the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures held a ceremony to apologize to Sacheen Littlefeather for her treatment at the Academy Awards ceremony of March 27, 1973, when she appeared on behalf of Marlon Brando to decline his Oscar for The Godfather.2 It is chilling to revisit the details of that evening with what Littlefeather described as an outburst of “tomahawk chops” in the audience, and boos and denunciations, directed at her in his stead, that were far more vociferous than anything that greeted Will Smith post-punch in 2022. This ceremony was different, with a warm welcome and packed house. Tragically, Littlefeather died of breast cancer after a long period of treatment on October 2, two weeks after the in-person event. Shockingly, she was then denounced as a “Pretendian” who was not really Indigenous, with disputes over these details ongoing.It was just a matter of time before the culture wars came for documentary. Many of the individual incidents have been reported in this column or in festival reports of the past year—disputes and disagreements, festival departures, organizational shake-ups, documentary dissembling, bad behavior in general— but nothing compares with the flood of emails I received from friends outside the film world, even outside the United States, when a New York Times article spread like wildfire in early autumn.3 Bad faith had arrived squarely and loudly in the US documentary community.The attention was puzzling. Michael Powell, an NYT writer with a background not in film but in sports, economics, and politics, had been assigned to a focus on “free speech and expression . . . and intellectual and campus debate” and busied himself reviving a fight that had already galvanized the field last winter when the premiere of Meg Smaker’s documentary Jihad Rehab at the 2022 Sundance Film Festival led to protests, explanations, apologies—including one from the film’s executive producer—and even the departure of staff from the festival itself.Why revisit this now? Over the summer, Smaker retitled her film The UnRedacted and tested the waters at the Doc Edge documentary festival in New Zealand. Not coincidentally, Powell’s bombshell of an article arrived just in time for the US election midterms. Blaming wokeness and Muslim bullies, he painted the blond all-American Smaker as the newest victim of political correctness.This relaunch is stunning. Little had been changed except the title since the uproar in January and February, yet here was Mr. Powell suddenly waking up to the news. Seven months after very public debates, a change of leadership at Sundance, and an absence of any discernible new developments, why would the New York Times arts section plaster a huge article about a stale controversy on its front page?I admit that at first I thought: Wow, what a publicist! But that’s the least of it. Powell’s Rip Van Winkle awakening was anything but woke: its entire raison d’être was to be antiwoke. The disgraced filmmaker had been reborn, with powerful new allies:Smaker linked up with the Foundation Against Intolerance & Racism [FAIR] to help fend off the cancellation campaign against her film. Together, Smaker and FAIR in the Arts are standing up . . . against the small group of activists trying to censor Jihad Rehab, while also showcasing the film to audiences who are eager to learn more about the important issues it touches on.4The FAIR announcement reveals that a new front has opened in the culture wars: an organization that is actively crafting campaigns aimed against the progressive forces that once constituted the main constituency for US independent documentary films. Founded a year ago, FAIR bills itself as “[p]romoting pro-human values and a common culture based on fairness, understanding, and humanity.”5 Smaker is just one of its many fronts.Such are the times. Documentary media has traded on its mantle of virtue for a very long time in the United States without having to fight actively to deserve the reputation. I think it’s time for standards to be reexamined and traditional handshake customs to be declared obsolete; the game has to be stepped up. No aspect of documentary “truth” can be taken for granted in this time of rampant disinformation.6 An urgent moment in need of clarification and redefinition has arrived.If the sixties were a fiercely exciting decade, that is due in no small part to the arrival of one Jean-Luc Godard, all (cinematic) guns blazing. His films didn’t just change cinema; they made a generation feel fully alive and excited and ready for anything. His films of the 1960s made every molecule of the body thrill to the experience of watching them.I saw them too young. When I saw Une femme est une femme as a teenager, I became convinced that I would never grow up to be a real woman, left depressed, and stayed so for months, sad about my lack of beauty and inadequate womanliness—that is to say, sexiness. In retrospect, I recognize that Godard mixed genres into such a potent brew that I took his invention as an instruction manual in how to live—and I’m sure I was not alone in that. He didn’t just change cinema, he changed style forever—and in so doing, changed the lives of his audiences. Luc Lagier’s documentary Godard, l’amour, la poésie (Godard, Love and Poetry, 2007) shows just how young Godard was then, too, and Anna Karina, and how they lived within and finally beyond the cinema they made together.7As for me, I outgrew Godard’s spell, and after Numéro deux in 1975, I was never again so smitten. Then, in 1985, I found myself in the position of defending him—and the New York Film Festival, which showed his Je vous salue, Marie (Hail Mary). Mail sacks full of handwritten protest letters, many penned in the pews of activist churches and sent en masse, arrived at the offices of the New York State Council on the Arts, where I was director of the film program. They were all addressed to Kitty Carlisle Hart, the council’s chairman of the board. Never did I have more fun than ghostwriting her replies, which emphasized to these letter writers their good fortune to be living in a democracy where they, the festival, and Godard himself could all exercise a right to free speech and expression. The wonderful Joanne Koch (recently departed), then head of the Film Society of Lincoln Center, which ran the festival, treated me to lunch in appreciation.The airwaves have been filled with tributes, including a lengthy obituary by FQ contributing editor James S. Williams.8 An impressively comprehensive tribute was assembled by Sight and Sound for its November issue. There have been more Internet remembrances than you can shake a stick at. Many FQ readers and contributors, raised on the films of JLG, from the brilliant À bout de souffle (Breathless) on, will not be able to imagine film history without his presence. For me, though, once his misogyny and misanthropy and Swiss coldness took hold, his films drove me out of the theater.Film scholar and former FQ contributor Judith Mayne felt differently. She was a member of the original US cinema studies generation shaped by the man and his films, so I end with her words instead:I didn’t discover Godard until I was 22 or 23. A friend and I went to see Masculin-Féminin and I was blown away, so much so that I enrolled in a film studies course because I realized I couldn’t fully appreciate Godard’s work because I didn’t know about film. I was under his spell for years. Remember how Women and Film wrote that Godard’s work in the early to mid 60s was feminist and critical of the patriarchy? That was me, too. But mostly Godard’s work felt like the greatest teacher ever. I can’t say the sexism didn’t bother me, but it was always overshadowed by how, no matter what, Godard’s work showed over and over what the cinema could be. Male POV? Of course! But his work demonstrated just how precarious any POV is.9Who? It’s odd to consider the extent to which Alain Tanner and his films have been forgotten, when in the seventies he was as widely known as JLG and almost as popular. Swiss like Godard, Tanner was born one year earlier and died two days earlier. He had lived for a time in London, and thereafter frequently collaborated with the writer John Berger. And he had lived briefly in Paris, too, at the time of the nouvelle vague’s beginning, but didn’t stay. Instead he returned to Geneva, married and settled down, and made a great many films, of which the best known internationally were La salamandre (1971) and Jonas qui aura 25 ans en l’an 2000 (Jonah Who Will Be 25 in the Year 2000, 1976), for which he and Berger were celebrated with a National Society of Film Critics award for Best Screenplay.Alas, it didn’t pay to be less than a god. The world’s fascination with Godard continued, while Tanner, with his warmer and more traditional approach to both cinema and his characters, is barely remembered today. Perhaps now his films will be seen again.I am withholding an RIP for the Edinburgh International Film Festival in the hope that the festival will have been saved by the time this issue is in print, but the news in early October was dire.10 The parent company of the Edinburgh festival had declared insolvency and announced the immediate end of the festival, its assets, and its future. My own maturity as a curator and critic depended centrally on my trips to Edinburgh in 1976 and 1979. I had never been to a European festival before, let alone one that merged film criticism and theory with new and revival screenings and debates over the history and future direction of the medium. I realize it’s a rosily nostalgic view, but that space, those people (Lynda Myles, Laura Mulvey), that wild mix of characters and offerings, shaped me for years.At their best, that is what film festivals continue to do. Yes, today there is usually an economic barrier to participation, whether in the form of ticket prices or plane tickets, that wasn’t there to the same extent then. The parties are more exclusive than they were back then, too, when anyone could show up and become an insider. But film festivals are as crucially important as ever. And that’s true more than ever at a time when an ignorance of other peoples, tribes, ethnicities, and nation-states can produce toxic, even deadly, effects.This edition of Film Quarterly reaffirms its status as a journal that offers an alternative commons, one where the best thinking about moving images and social impact can circulate and interact freed from the usual silos of professional and academic specializations and traditions.The special dossier on the New Disability Media seeks to bring the field up to date on both practices and theoretical advances. It has been coedited with Faye Ginsburg and Lawrence Carter-Long, both longtime thinkers, writers, and advocates for new approaches to the role of in moving both their and The dossier an on documentary and work by and the of that is setting new standards for thinking about the of a A Disability and at the Sundance Film Festival, its Best Documentary and became one of the Oscar for Best it this new No would be without about Us without after out as a and so has it to by and festival participation, by and or even by the new Foundation media has become a not as a but as a of this FQ a wonderful of In the United at the early of filmmaker and in London, who a film and with films from his and new of in his his led to his less role as an from his with in a to his the early theoretical of and through an attention to of as of thinking on of work as to a of full of by and and mining the work of and the of documentary to of a no by for of has long been the film here on the documentary it of the which the original with the help of a of own the of a that like have to a new space for and the work of the whose work has made into a of its with that independent of As in most their or their of a of that from For and the Disability that are a of with the documentary by the of on his film’s as a of into that is in a world that more a of to the of the the of that are to dossier Lawrence what he the of Disability by and this much celebrated I You by that has almost always been a in the world of cinema, Laura to the of an that has into the cinema for far too this issue with of work on questions of as well as and who has made such as The and The of but also has a leadership role in the to public with the Michael in turn, who had a long history as a to his about the culture of the in An arts as has also had a impact on the FQ is to a for and thinking and as in these two the festival world, has a from on its as at so many festivals this as the film world came in She festival director are to have the not the assets, not the back the to both and special attention to one of my the great director and two of her early films, and own on a in that in the the death of and the death of most of my days in the documentary I just in time to two by in and in continue their work of issues and that not be In her on other than in of the long history of the and the in the while the of at this same a time when the has at a of by and long as against as long as as long as nuclear will continue to experience the world, both and as a of For the of the new The with the of The that in of the to think through what that was all while the in the show by their her column to an of the January of last and that they beyond news or even through the of former James to the and produce the with about her new the of and which he in its of and of to the a that critical as its the work of and in in of their of their and the on their the books editor has attention to an of in the and and in and The New The Women of US by and in by in The from Film to and Laura in have a to up
Récupéré en direct depuis OpenAlex et désinversé. Les résumés ne sont pas conservés dans cette base de données : les index inversés représentent 8,6 Go des 9,3 Go de texte de la base, et le serveur dispose de 13 Go libres.
Prédiction distillée sur la base complète
Imitation des enseignantsNi prévalence calibrée, ni vérité terrain. Validation humaine à venir. Apprise à partir de 10 348 étiquettes directes de Codex et de 10 348 étiquettes directes de Gemma. Le mode candidate est l'union des têtes enseignantes seuillées; le consensus est leur intersection. Ces sorties portent le statut machine_predicted_unvalidated et ne sont ni des étiquettes humaines ni des étiquettes directes de modèles de pointe.
Scores Codex et Gemma par catégorie
| Catégorie | Codex | Gemma |
|---|---|---|
| Métarecherche | 0,000 | 0,000 |
| Méta-épidémiologie (sens strict) | 0,000 | 0,000 |
| Méta-épidémiologie (sens large) | 0,000 | 0,000 |
| Bibliométrie | 0,000 | 0,000 |
| Études des sciences et des technologies | 0,001 | 0,000 |
| Communication savante | 0,000 | 0,000 |
| Science ouverte | 0,000 | 0,000 |
| Intégrité de la recherche | 0,000 | 0,000 |
| Charge utile insuffisante (le modèle a refusé de juger) | 0,035 | 0,000 |
Scores machine (provisoires)
Les deux têtes enseignantes du modèle étudiant, lues sur ce travail. Un score ordonne la base pour la relecture; il n'affirme jamais une catégorie, et le statut de validation accompagne chaque rangée tel quel.
Scores de référence d'un modèle non mature (critères de maturité non atteints, 7 itérations). Un score ordonne; il n'affirme jamais une catégorie.
score_only:v0-immature-baseline · tel quel depuis la passe de notation : score_only signifie que le nombre peut ordonner les travaux, et qu'aucune étiquette de catégorie n'en découle