Conversations Across Screen Cultures to launch William Greaves: Filmmaking as Mission with Dr. Scott MacDonald, Hamilton College

By Patricia Zimmermann, October 31, 2021

Conversations Across Screen Cultures with Dr. Scott MacDonald Friday November 12

Conversations Across Screen Cultures, an online initiative featuring live interviews and discussions with film and media scholars, media artists, and programmers in the Central New York region, continues with an interview with Dr. Scott MacDonald, Professor of Film and Art History, Hamilton College to celebrate the publication of his new book coedited with Jacqueline Najuma Stewart , William Greaves: Filmmaking as Mission (Columbia University Press, 2021)

Dr. MacDonald will be interviewed by Dr. Patricia Zimmermann, Charles A. Dana Professor of Screen Studies, Ithaca College.

When: Nov 12, 2021 04:00 PM Eastern Time (US and Canada)

Register in advance for this meeting:

https://ithaca.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJwqdO-tpjMjGtcar-Y0XkMUGOPp_de0tkzw

 After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.

greaves

William Greaves is one of the most significant and compelling American filmmakers of the past century. Best known for his experimental film about its own making, Symbiopsychotaxiplasm: Take One, Greaves was an influential independent documentary filmmaker who produced, directed, shot, and edited more than a hundred films on a variety of social issues and on key African American figures ranging from Muhammad Ali to Ralph Bunche to Ida B. Wells. A multitalented artist, his career also included stints as a songwriter, a member of the Actors Studio, and, during the late 1960s, a producer and cohost of Black Journal, the first national television show focused on African American culture and politics.

William Greaves: Filmmaking as Mission provides the first comprehensive overview of Greaves’s remarkable career. It brings together a wide range of material, including a mix of incisive essays from critics and scholars, Greaves’s own writings, an extensive meta-interview with Greaves, conversations with his wife and collaborator Louise Archambault Greaves and his son David, and a critical dossier on Symbiopsychotaxiplasm. Together, they illuminate Greaves’s mission to use filmmaking as a tool for transforming the ways African Americans were perceived by others and the ways they saw themselves. This landmark book is an essential resource on Greaves’s work and his influence on independent cinema and African-American culture.

Scott and Jackie

Named an Academy Scholar by the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences in 2012, Dr.Scott MacDonald is the author of 17 books, including A Critical Cinema: Interviews with Independent Filmmakers (5 volumes), and has done numerous essays and interviews. His newest books are American Ethnographic Film and Personal Documentary: The Cambridge Turn (essays) and Avant-Doc: Intersections of Documentary and Avant-Garde Cinema (interviews).His groundbreaking work has brought experimental film into the canon of screen studies.

With Patricia Zimmermann, he is coauthor of The Flaherty: Decades in the Cause of Independent Cinema (2017) and coeditor of Flash Flaherty: Tales from a Film Seminar (2021) .He has curated and presented film events for the Museum of Modern Art, the Harvard Film Archive, the Pacific Film Archive in Berkeley and elsewhere. He has been a film programmer for decades.

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Dr. Patricia Zimmermann is the Charles A. Dana Professor of Screen Studies at Ithaca College, Ithaca, New York. She is also Director of the Finger Lakes Environmental Film Festival.

Her most recent books include Thinking through Digital Media: Transnational Environments and Locative Places with Dale Hudson (2015); Open Spaces: Openings, Closings, and Thresholds in International Public Media  (2016);  The Flaherty: Fifty Years in the Cause of Independent Cinema, with Scott MacDonald (2017); Open Space Collaborative New Media: A Toolkit for Theory and Practice (2018);  Documentary Across Platforms: Reverse Engineering Media, Place, and Politics (2019); and Flash Flaherty: Tales from a Film Seminar (2021), coedited with Scott MacDonald. With Louis Massiah she coprogrammed the national touring exhibition We Tell: Fifty Years of Participatory Community Media.

The Conversations Across Screen Cultures initiative is a collaboration between faculty from Ithaca College, Hobart and William Smith Colleges, the Finger Lakes Environmental Film Festival, the Cine con Cultura festival, and the Syracuse University Human Rights Film Festival.

Sessions will feature open discussion and dialogue with students and faculty in attendance.