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Posts by Brian Jacobson

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1 week ago 14 4 0 2
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Next week in New York: Petroleum in (and out of) the Visual Arts

sofheyman.org/events/petro...

1 month ago 4 1 0 0
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Today! All old and new books in @columbiaup.bsky.social's Film & Culture series are 50% off, including NOMADIC CINEMA by Alison Griffiths; MAN OF TASTE, by Rob King; THE CINEMA OF EXTRACTIONS by @bleudeciel.bsky.social; and DEATH BY LAUGHTER, by @hennefem.bsky.social! bit.ly/4rupQx9 #CyberMonday

4 months ago 14 8 0 0
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The Cinema of Extractions | Columbia University Press From the petroleum used to make film stock to the carbon and tungsten needed for studio lights and theater projectors, every movie relies on extractive proce... | CUP

This new book extends the project to more explicit connections between infrastructural forms and image forms, in part to ask what place visual/formal/textual analytic approaches have after the turn to what I call Raw Materialism

cup.columbia.edu/book/the-cin...

4 months ago 6 0 0 0
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This book expanded the historical and geographic scope of the infrastructure-image project with essays by 12 scholars working from early cinema to television and avant-garde new media - and infrastructure from iron/glass and rail to electrical grids and FTZs
www.ucpress.edu/books/in-the...

4 months ago 4 0 1 0

Two decades ago I started working on the architecture and infrastructure of moving images. Didn’t put “infrastructure” in the title so it seems to have gotten lost in the era of keyword-search scholarship, but this was the first big product of that project

cup.columbia.edu/book/studios...

4 months ago 10 1 1 0
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Twelve great essays on the infrastructure of film and media images:

www.ucpress.edu/books/in-the...

5 months ago 21 3 0 0
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Twelve great essays on the infrastructure of film and media images:

www.ucpress.edu/books/in-the...

5 months ago 21 3 0 0
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Photoplay (Apr - Sep 1918) : Chicago, Photoplay Magazine Publishing Company : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive

one source is here: archive.org/details/pho1...

5 months ago 1 0 0 0
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We are hiring in American History - TT open rank search
applications.caltech.edu/jobs/history

5 months ago 2 3 0 0
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revistas.uam.es/secuencias/a...

5 months ago 5 0 0 0
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criticalinquiry.uchicago.edu/parker_stens...

6 months ago 8 0 0 0

Did you ever post the enviro course list? I’d love to see that one too

7 months ago 2 0 1 0
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Kleptomania, family feuds and Europe’s tallest dam: the strange story of Jean-Luc Godard’s debut film In desperation at his antisocial behaviour, the mother of the French new wave pioneer sent him to work in ‘purgatory’. It was to inspire Operation Concrete, Godard’s only documentary
7 months ago 1 0 0 0

call me humanist deadweight, but if you think it is an objectively logical and effective argument to equate how the humanities and sciences have, for centuries, shared a mission within the university with the 2000 AOL/Time Warner merger, you might need remedial humanities training, not "unyoking"

8 months ago 7 1 0 0
Table of contents for Discourse 46.3. Georges Didi-Huberman and Heath Valentine, "Why Obey?"; Basil Bababneh, "Negotiating Queer Arab Formalism," Jamie Chambers, "Fabulation, Magical Transformation and Montage," Christopher Peterson, "The Beekeeper's Ghost," Travis Alexander, "Those things you see through," and Matthew Hubbell, "Revolutionary Postures," plus more!

Table of contents for Discourse 46.3. Georges Didi-Huberman and Heath Valentine, "Why Obey?"; Basil Bababneh, "Negotiating Queer Arab Formalism," Jamie Chambers, "Fabulation, Magical Transformation and Montage," Christopher Peterson, "The Beekeeper's Ghost," Travis Alexander, "Those things you see through," and Matthew Hubbell, "Revolutionary Postures," plus more!

Discourse 46.3 is live! It features an absolutely essential piece reflecting on fascist times by Georges Didi-Huberman: "Why Obey?," skillfully translated by Heath Valentine from the short book Pour Quoi Obéir. Every piece in this issue is fantastic.

8 months ago 18 5 1 0
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Mythologies of a Green Petrostate: Liv Bugge’s ‘Umbilical Fire’ The artist’s show at Kunsthall Trondheim probes the stories we tell ourselves about oil – and proposes new ones

shout out to The Cinema of Extractions in this review of work I wish I could get to Trondheim to see www.frieze.com/article/liv-...

8 months ago 7 1 0 0
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Oh yeah of course, it’s great stuff

8 months ago 1 0 0 0

they offer so many good options, it's hard to choose

8 months ago 1 0 1 0
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Volume 157 Issue 1 | Representations | University of California Press

(and the rest of the wonderful essays in that issues by Debashree Mukherjee, Weihong Bao, Katerina Korola, and Yuri Furuhata - they are all so terrific): online.ucpress.edu/representati...

8 months ago 1 0 0 0
Do I Know the Anthropocene When I See It? Anthropocene: The Human Epoch (2018) is a film that gives rise to productive confusion about the sight and state of our planet and the inadequacy of our current concepts and aesthetic categories. The ...

Jennifer Fay's essay about Baichwal (et al)'s 2018 Anthropocene The Human Epoch, which I know a lot of people have problems with, but that is precisely what Fay's essay takes up: online.ucpress.edu/representati...

8 months ago 1 0 1 0
An Anthropocene Viewing Condition This essay explores what I call an Anthropocene viewing condition, a contemporary spectator position in which images of nature, particularly moving images of natures past, resonate with present and fu...

two more shoutouts: Jennifer Peterson's @jenniferpete.bsky.social essay about watching old films from the perspective of the so-called Anthropocene: online.ucpress.edu/representati...

8 months ago 6 0 2 0
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Big Oil’s High-Risk Love Affair with Film | Los Angeles Review of Books Big oil and Hollywood came of age together.

lareviewofbooks.org/article/big-...

8 months ago 1 0 0 0
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The Shadow of Progress and the Cultural Markers of the Anthropocene | Environmental History: Vol 24, No 1

Two short and (I think) very undergrad ready essays about these kinds of films: www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/abs/10.1...

8 months ago 1 0 2 0
Evil Does Not ExistDownstream Environmental Form Ryūsuke Hamaguchi’s Evil Does Not Exist (2023) takes a formal approach to environmental criticism that this article names the “downstream.” Delivered audio-visually and thematically, Hamaguchi’s techn...

Self interested, but this is short, aims to be easy to read, and was fun to write (I’ve heard from folks who had success teaching it last year): online.ucpress.edu/fq/article/7...

8 months ago 2 0 1 0
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I have had success teaching corporate oil shorts, especially BP’s Shadows of Progress. They tend to blow the students’ minds. Shell’s Climate of Concern is another good one

8 months ago 3 0 2 0

Evil Does Not Exist

8 months ago 7 0 1 0

Sad but true

9 months ago 1 0 0 0
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Imperfect, but I would take one Jia film for every ten of the films on The NY Times’s Jia-less list

9 months ago 10 0 2 0

Have we also been trained—and trained our grads—that we only have time to read books’ introductions, which are often available online? Why buy the book if you only “need” to read the first 25 pgs? We need a culture of deeper reading practices, but that seems antithetical to the academic horse race

10 months ago 5 0 1 0