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A Mani-Pedi-Anti-Counter-FESTO for Queer Screen Production Practice

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posted on 2024-05-16, 00:08 authored by ANGIE BLACKANGIE BLACK, Patrick Kelly, Kim Munro, Stayci Taylor
In this audiovisual essay, four practitioner-academics seek to identify and address the need to reimagine queer screen production. Traditional heteronormative storytelling dominates the screen production landscape, necessitating a challenge to create more inclusive and diverse narratives. Through the creation of a manifesto essay film, the researchers collectively reflect on their creative practices, synthesize their approaches, and develop a new vision for queer screen production. The result demonstrates the value of embracing: sustainable practices, queer kinship-making as filmmaking, alternatives to hegemonic forms, queer shame, queer failure, eternal adolescence, and the disruption of the ever-forward momentum (among other approaches). Manifesto-making as a method encourages creative practitioners to question the status quo of screen production contexts and strategies, and to think critically about the storytelling norms in broader creative practice. The researchers argue that such an approach can enable creative practitioners to pave the way for new, innovative collaborations and contribute to a more inclusive and diverse creative landscape. This film enacts the opportunities that arise when considering the spectrum of screen production in broader, 'queerer', ways, through notions of kinship-making, polyphony and the 'queer art of failure' (Halberstam 2011). The disruption of dominant narrative models can be considered in the context of queer theory's critiques of heteronormative temporality, asking how queer approaches to narrative construction might challenge the heteronormative markers of success and happiness, or what Elizabeth Freeman calls 'chrononormativity' (2010). Using 'manifesto as method', the film combines the authors' separate practices in filmmaking, screenwriting, mobile media and documentary in ways that deviate from mainstream categorisations, production hierarchies and workflows.

History

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NTRO Output Type

  • Recorded or Rendered Work

NTRO Output Category

  • Recorded or Rendered Work : Audio / visual recording

Place

Universidade Católica Portuguesa

Venue

Journal of Science and Technology of the Arts

NTRO Publisher

Universidade Católica Portuguesa

Medium

Audio-visual film

Research Statement

Traditional heteronormative storytelling dominates screen production, necessitating a challenge for more inclusive narratives. Through the creation of a manifesto essay film, the researchers reflect on their practices and approaches, to develop a vision for queer screen production. This film innovatively explores 'queerer' approaches to screen production, disrupting dominant narrative models and challenging heteronormative temporality. It contributes to expanded understandings of narrative construction within cinema, aligning with critiques of societal norms in queer theory. Using ‘manifesto as method’, the film combines the authors’ separate practices in filmmaking, screenwriting, mobile media and documentary in ways that deviate from mainstream categorisations, production hierarchies and workflows. Its value is attested to by the following: o A peer-reviewed publication in the Journal of Science and Technology of the Arts. o Peer review selection Sightlines: Filmmaking in the Academy Film Festival o Invited to present at peer reviewed conferences and keynote at Gender Sex and Sexuality Conference.

Size or Duration of Work

15 minute film

Affiliation

Angie Black, University of Melbourne

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