Mit ihrem Titel würdigt die Reihe „Kracauer Lectures in Film and
Media Theory“ den gebürtigen Frankfurter Philosophen, Soziologen,
Schriftsteller und Film- und Medientheoretiker Siegfried Kracauer
(1889-1966), einen der einflussreichsten Denker des 20. Jahrhunderts im
Feld der Film- und Medientheorie. Zugleich verwies der Reihentitel auf
die Rolle Frankfurts und seiner Universität als Gründungsorte der
kritischen Reflexion des Films und der technischen Medien im 20.
Jahrhundert.
Die Reihe setzt sich zum Ziel, avancierte
aktuelle Positionen der Film- und Medientheorie und der
Medienphilosophie sowie der Medienreflexion in der Kunst- und
Kulturwissenschaft und der philosophischen Ästhetik zur Darstellung zu
bringen und damit einen Beitrag zur Erweiterung und Entwicklung des
Feldes der Film- und Medienwissenschaft zu leisten, der am schnellsten
wachsenden geisteswissenschaftlichen Disziplin in Deutschland.
Dienstag 25.11.2025, 18 Uhr
Lucie Česálková (Charles University (Prag))
Screening Extractivism with a (More than) Human Face
Vortrag in englischer Sprache.
Eisenhower-Raum, IG Farben-Gebäude 1.314
Campus Westend, Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main
Playfully
referring to the program of radical reform of socialism in
Czechoslovakia at the end of the 1960s (so-called “socialism with a
human face”) and at the same time to the potential of environmentally
conscious imagination in state socialism, this lecture aims to rethink
industrial and agricultural film as a specific form of mediation of the
human/nature/technology complex. It will primarily focus on films that
have produced political rationality and aesthetics of energy and
contributed to the neutralization (or questioning) of extractivism.
Eastern European films celebrating coal miners, depicting the
construction of large hydroelectric power plants and refineries, mapping
the welding of transnational infrastructures such as oil and gas
pipelines, explaining the construction of nuclear power plants, or
revealing the possibilities of solar energy, as well as those
communicating various energy crises, allow us to examine the connections
between extractivism, energy, labour, and the environment differently
than from the traditional perspective of the capitalocene, offering also
a different map of geopolitical energy relations than between the West
and the Global South.
This lecture will therefore offer a
reframing of these concepts and dynamics through an Eastern perspective,
while emphasizing the importance of studying the aesthetics of utility
media as an essential complement to global material and intellectual
histories and critical infrastructure studies. Drawing on a broad corpus
of films spanning raw material sources and decades of the second half
of the twentieth century, it will ask whether we can conceive industrial
aesthetics beyond processuality, techno-optimism, and acceleration.
Lucie
Česálková is a film historian and works as an Associate Professor at
the Department of Film Studies, Charles University, and as an
editor-in-chief of the academic journal Iluminace, published by the
National Film Archive in Prague. In her research, she focuses on the
history of nonfiction cinema, specifically its educational, promotional,
or instructional variants, and on the history of noncommercial film
exhibition and moviegoing. Recently, she co-edited the volume
Non-Fiction Cinema in Postwar Europe. Visual Culture and the
Reconstruction of Public Space (eds. Lucie Česálková, Johannes
Preatorius-Rhein, Perrine Val, Paolo Villa, AUP 2024). Engaging the
environmental and energy humanities perspective, her current project
analyzes the ways nature was framed as a resource in Czech industrial
and agricultural film and asks how a (post)socialist perspective can
shift existing concepts of extractivism and the capitalocene.
Alle Informationen gibt es auf der Webseite. Nach der Veranstaltung gibt es dort auch einen Videomitschnitt der Veranstaltung.