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Erica Carter

    This author specializes in German Studies, focusing her scholarly attention on post-war West German reconstruction and the role of the consuming woman during that era. Her work delves into the social and cultural transformations that shaped German society in the aftermath of World War II. Through her writings, she offers keen insights into the period's prevailing mentalities and societal norms. Her research illuminates the complexities of a nation rebuilding itself and the evolving identity of women within that context.

    Mapping the sensible
    • Mapping the sensible

      Distribution, Inscription, Cinematic Thinking

      In academic and public discourse, 'mapping' has become a ubiquitous term for epistemic practices ranging from surveys of scholarly fields to processes of data collection, ordering and visualization. Mapping captures patterns of distribution, segregation and hierarchy across socio-cultural spaces and geographical territories. Often lost in such accounts, however, is the experiential dimension of mapping as an aesthetic practice with determinate social, cultural and political effects. This volume draws on approaches from film philosophy, media archaeology, decolonial scholarship and independent film practice to explore mapping as a mediated experience in which film becomes entangled in larger processes of historical subject-formation, as well as in dissident reconfigurations of cultural memory. Proposing an approach to mapping through decolonial aesthetics and poetic thinking, the three essays in this volume help define a film studies perspective on mapping as a practice that structures political and aesthetic regimes, organizes and communicates shared realities, but also enables dissenting reconfigurations of concretely experienced worlds.

      Mapping the sensible