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Hier könnt ihr euch in Form von über 2.000 Keynotes, Performances, Panels, Screenings und all den anderen Formaten, die wir über die Jahre präsentiert haben, mit unseren vergangenen Festivalausgaben beschäftigen.
Displaying 1081 - 1100 of 2093
Date: 
01.02.2004
Format: 
Panel
Date: 
31.01.2004
Format: 
Panel
Date: 
02.02.2004
Format: 
Workshop
Date: 
02.02.2004
Format: 
Panel
Date: 
30.01.2004
Format: 
Performance
Date: 
03.02.2004
Format: 
Panel
Date: 
31.01.2004
Format: 
Workshop
Date: 
31.01.2004
Format: 
Panel
Date: 
01.02.2004
Format: 
Panel
Date: 
31.01.2004
Format: 
Panel
Date: 
01.02.2004
Format: 
Panel
Date: 
03.02.2004
Format: 
Panel
Date: 
30.01.2004
Format: 
Performance
Date: 
05.02.2005
Format: 
Partner event
Date: 
07.02.2005
Format: 
Partner event
Date: 
08.02.2005
Format: 
Workshop
Date: 
04.02.2005
Format: 
Partner event
Related participants: 
Sven-Ola Tücke
Date: 
03.02.2005
Format: 
Partner event
Date: 
03.02.2005
Format: 
Performance
Related participants: 
Ralf Schreiber
Sebastian Noth
Christian Faubel
Date: 
04.02.2005
Format: 
Workshop

Seiten

/artwork

Year: 
1988
Format: 
film/video
Edition: 
1989

/event

Related participants: 
Pierre Bastien
Date: 
30.01.2007
Format: 
Performance

/person

/text

In 1895, viewers of the Lumière brothers' 50-second film L’Arrivée d’un train are said to have stampeded out of the theater when a train raced toward them on the projection screen. Unaccustomed to the cinematic experience, they couldn't help but take the image of the train for the real thing. The Lumière Effect, named after this supposed occurrence, describes the phenomenon of mistaking representation for reality. In this essay, the poet and artist manuel arturo abreu compares this (Western) myth of image-reality overlap to the "over-mediated" nature of how the West interprets the face of the Other. This face is a site of projection for Western anxieties, guilt, and fear: a fear that implies having always-already called for State protection. Through a reading of Emmanuel Levinas and Édouard Glissant, abreu suggests strategies of opacity to resist the "violence of the metaphor" of the face.