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The scope of animation: an interdisciplinary journal was and remains comprehensive: to address and include all animation made using all known (and perhaps yet to be revealed) techniques since the late 18th century up to the digital shift and beyond, to reveal its implications for other forms of time-based media expression – past, present and future – and to illuminate how these affect our lives. Back then we speculated the journal would be guaranteed longevity by the shift towards interdisciplinary practice and research. It is inspiring to see this speculation confirmed, due in part to the significant increase in PhD candidates submitting their research for consideration (three of whom have articles in this issue), and this also attests to the healthy expansion of our field in academia. This was evident at Animate Energies, this year’s Society for Animation Studies conference in Tulane, organized by Eric Herhuth. 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The scope of animation: an interdisciplinary journal was and remains comprehensive: to address and include all animation made using all known (and perhaps yet to be revealed) techniques since the late 18th century up to the digital shift and beyond, to reveal its implications for other forms of time-based media expression – past, present and future – and to illuminate how these affect our lives. Back then we speculated the journal would be guaranteed longevity by the shift towards interdisciplinary practice and research. It is inspiring to see this speculation confirmed, due in part to the significant increase in PhD candidates submitting their research for consideration (three of whom have articles in this issue), and this also attests to the healthy expansion of our field in academia. This was evident at Animate Energies, this year’s Society for Animation Studies conference in Tulane, organized by Eric Herhuth. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
自2006年创刊以来,该杂志首次无法如期出版,这是因为全球疫情的动荡影响了许多人的个人、机构和职业,对工作流程、系统和截止日期产生了连锁反应。我们感谢您的耐心,这是我们的第一期双刊,我们的目标是填补您在此期间可能感受到的我们领域新研究和写作的知识空白。本期的文章证明了我们的作者所从事的动画的范围和方法。动画的范围:一本跨学科期刊过去和现在都很全面:涉及并包括自18世纪末以来,直到数字转型及以后,使用所有已知(可能尚未揭示)技术制作的所有动画,揭示其对其他形式的基于时间的媒体表达的影响——过去,现在和未来——并阐明这些是如何影响我们的生活的。当时,我们推测,通过向跨学科实践和研究的转变,该杂志的寿命将得到保证。看到这一猜测得到证实是令人鼓舞的,部分原因是提交研究供考虑的博士生人数显著增加(其中三人在本期文章中),这也证明了我们在学术界的领域正在健康扩展。这一点在今年由Eric Herhuth组织的杜兰动画研究学会会议Animate Energies上表现得很明显。这期双刊还庆祝了一系列学科方法,这些方法帮助观众理解以这种运动图像形式工作的艺术家所能获得的语义密度。50年前,加拿大国家电影委员会的Wolf Koenig在奇基克塔卢克的Kinngait(当时被称为英国电影学院多塞特角)与因纽特人青年一起发起了一场动画研讨会。他们创作了一系列电影——《多塞特角动画》(1973年),这些电影是有形和非物质文化遗产的杰出动画文献。Joshua D Miner在他的“混合纪录片和土著模型动画实验”中探讨了最近土著纪录片方法的主要特征,特别是北美土著/第一民族,这些方法强调社会历史、政治、文化和美学特征。然后重点放在技术上,包括定格和机械,以及混合材料、土著“工艺”艺术风格,以及三位非虚构电影制作人作品的模拟和数字方面。米尔纳研究了这些艺术家如何通过他们的实践和在一系列平台上质疑、挑战并最终重建和补救定居者殖民主义的高度负面影响和问责的迫切需要。16毫米的多塞特角电影和米尔纳讨论的作品都是直接的、批判性的,通常是合作的代理行为。他的文章令人信服地揭示了有多少土著艺术家正在使用动画形式的最新技术来应对定居者殖民主义的多方面、文化破坏性历史罪行的持续揭露,并开辟一条通往自治、自决和尊重的未来道路。我们已经发表了许多关于动画中声音的文章,但还需要更多的文章来更深入地了解音频对视觉轨迹的中心作用以及构成它的许多组件,如音效。这些是Patrick Sullivan的“Hanna Barbera’s 1030696 ANM0010.1177/1768477211030696动画的主题:跨学科期刊编辑社论2021
For the first time since its launch in 2006, the journal was unable to publish a scheduled issue, nota bene due to the upheavals of the global pandemic that have affected many personally, institutionally and professionally, with knock-on effects on workflows, systems and deadlines. We thank you for your patience and with this, our first double issue, we aim to fill the knowledge gap in new research and writing in our field that you may have felt in the interim. The articles in this issue attest to the ranges and approaches to animation that our authors engage with. The scope of animation: an interdisciplinary journal was and remains comprehensive: to address and include all animation made using all known (and perhaps yet to be revealed) techniques since the late 18th century up to the digital shift and beyond, to reveal its implications for other forms of time-based media expression – past, present and future – and to illuminate how these affect our lives. Back then we speculated the journal would be guaranteed longevity by the shift towards interdisciplinary practice and research. It is inspiring to see this speculation confirmed, due in part to the significant increase in PhD candidates submitting their research for consideration (three of whom have articles in this issue), and this also attests to the healthy expansion of our field in academia. This was evident at Animate Energies, this year’s Society for Animation Studies conference in Tulane, organized by Eric Herhuth. This double issue also celebrates the range of disciplinary approaches that are helping audiences to understand the semantic density available to artists working in this moving image form. Fifty years ago, Wolf Koenig of the National Film Board of Canada instigated an animation workshop with Inuit youth on Kinngait, Qikiqtaaluk (then known as Cape Dorset, Baffin Island). They created a set of films – Animation from Cape Dorset (1973) – that are remarkable animated documents of tangible and intangible cultural heritage. In his ‘Experiments in Hybrid Documentary and Indigenous Model Animation’, Joshua D Miner examines the principal characteristics of recent Indigenous documentary approaches, specifically Native/First Nation peoples of North America, that have an emphasis on socio-historical, political, cultural and aesthetic features. The focus then is on techniques, including stop motion and machinima, and on hybrid material, Indigenous ‘craft’ artwork styles, and analogue and digital aspects of the works of three non-fiction filmmakers. Milner examines how these artists question, challenge and ultimately reconstruct and remediate the highly negative impacts and urgent need for accountability of settler colonialism through their practice and on a range of platforms. Both the 16mm Cape Dorset films and the works Milner discusses are direct, critical, often collaborative acts of agency. His article provides compelling insights into how many Indigenous artists are using recent technologies available to the animated form to address the continuing revelations of the manifold, culturally destructive historical crimes of settler colonialism and to carve a future path towards autonomy, self-determination and respect. We have published a number of articles on sound in animation, but more are needed to gain a deeper understanding of the centrality of audio to visual tracks and the many components that comprise it, such as sound effects. These are the subject of Patrick Sullivan’s ‘Hanna-Barbera’s 1030696 ANM0010.1177/17468477211030696animation: an interdisciplinary journalEditorial editorial2021
期刊介绍:
Especially since the digital shift, animation is increasingly pervasive and implemented in many ways in many disciplines. Animation: An Interdisciplinary Journal provides the first cohesive, international peer-reviewed publishing platform for animation that unites contributions from a wide range of research agendas and creative practice. The journal"s scope is very comprehensive, yet its focus is clear and simple. The journal addresses all animation made using all known (and yet to be developed) techniques - from 16th century optical devices to contemporary digital media - revealing its implications on other forms of time-based media expression past, present and future.