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Ute Holl: Cinema and String Figures
Cinema and String Figures
(S. 365 – 371)

Ute Holl

Cinema and String Figures
On Maya Deren's Witch's Cradle

PDF, 7 Seiten

  • Wissenschaftstheorie
  • Spiel
  • Ethnologie
  • Theoriebildung
  • Technikgeschichte
  • Kulturgeschichte

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Deutsch

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Deutsch, Englisch, Französisch

Ute Holl

Ute Holl

Ute Holl is a filmmaker, media scholar and professor for media aesthetics at Basel University. Her research focuses on a media-history of perception and on the epistemology of audiovisual media. She has published on film and cinema as well as on the mediahistory of acoustics and electro-acoustics. On Maya Deren, she published e.g. Choreographie für eine Kamera, Schriften zum Film (1995, co-edited by Jutta Hercher) and Cinema Trance and Cybernetics (2017).

Weitere Texte von Ute Holl bei DIAPHANES
Mario Schulze (Hg.), Sarine Waltenspül (Hg.): String Figures

Stretched between eight fingers and two thumbs, sometimes between teeth and toes, lengths of string make shapes. String figures can do many things: they tell stories, they pass the time, they make the unsayable showable, they connect people. Whatever else they may be, they have often been explored by artists, ethnologists and theorists: as an aesthetic practice, as something to collect, as a non-Western way of thinking.

In recent years, string figures have gained prominence in cultural theory. Donna Haraway promotes string figures as a method of thinking and collaboration between both disciplines and species. Rather than the technicist and rigid metaphor of the network, Haraway’s string figures provide a playful, process-oriented, embodied, performative (and non-Western) mode of thought in which responsibility and collaboration are foregrounded.

Looking at ways of playing together on the ruins of our history the publication brings together different threads and seeks to weave connections between world regions and disciplines.

Works by Maya Deren, Harry Smith, Mulkun Wirrpanda, Nasser Mufti, Katrien Vermeire, Caroline Monnet, Toby Christian, Maureen Lander, Andy Warhol and contributions by Paul Basu, Seraina Dür and Jonas Gillmann, Mareile Flitsch, Rainer Hatoum, Ines Kleesattel, Robyn McKenzie, Nasser Mufti, Mario Schulze, Rani Singh, Henry Adam Svec, Éric Vandendriessche, Sarine Waltenspül among others; developed by Mario Schulze and Sarine Waltenspül in collaboration with the Museum Tinguely Basel, Switzerland

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