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  1. Home »
  2. Events »
  3. Cornelia Goethe Colloquia »
  4. Never Too Old to be Seen »
  5. Mothers (as) Grandmothers in Recent European (Small National) Cinemas

Mothers (as) Grandmothers in Recent European (Small National) Cinemas

Figures of Authority, Goddesses of Wisdom, or Mad Rebels, and/or Societal Waste?
Never Too Old to be Seen
Format: 
Talk
Language: 
English
On-site event
20 December, 2023 - 6:15pm to 7:45pm
Goethe-Uni, Campus Westend, PEG

1.G191

In spite of their peripheral situatedness and scarce(er) resources, 21st century European small national cinemas are overrepresented as far as the moving image-based, narrative fictional articulation of the ageing, childless, or infertile woman, fighting an ecological(ly) inspired ‘war’, is concerned. Our presentation shall examine the phenomenon along three subhypotheses.

1. Older women might appear more frequently in decision-making positions in small national film and television production cultures – such as the presently considered Danish, Hungarian, Icelandic, Greek, Lithuanian, Slovakian, Swedish, or the Romanian one(s) – and their involvement is essential with regards to ‘proposals’ to reimagine female existence past youth and fertility.

2. These lonely women characters, performing small charities or sabotage actions on behalf of nature and the environment, are a 21st century actualization of the stereotype, also archetype, of the caring woman, possibly wise, old, a witch or a priest, even a deity – a way to engage with climate trauma through a powerful yet ‘cost-effective’ method, so important for scarce(er)-resource small national film and television cultures.

3. The explicit childlessness and/or infertility, as well as the pronounced ageing process of the heroines might be linked to the grandmother theory advanced in behavioural ecological thinking. “A woman could not invest fully in her grandchildren if she went on having children of her own” suggested Richard Dawkins in The Selfish Gene in 1976, offering thus an explanation “of the evolution of the menopause in females” (Dawkins 115-116). With the overall ageing of the population in a European Anthropocene context, the tendency is more pronounced in the case of women – who simply live longer than men – and it is even more evident in scarcer-resource small national contexts of grand/mothers. Thus, these proposals to reimagine female existence in the Anthropocene through the stereotype of the lonely ecological terrorist, the archetype of the wise old woman, and in the character of ‘mothers as grandmothers’ must be considered in detail.

Andrea Virginás
Profilbild Andrea Virginás

Dr. Andrea Virginás is Associate Professor in the Faculty of Theatre and Film, Babeș-Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca. Author of Film Genres in Hungarian and Romanian Cinema: History, Theory, Reception (2021), Bolyai János Research Fellow of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences (2021-2024), project leader of "Cultural Traumas in Contemporary European Small National Cinemas" (Romania, 2022-2024), and Romanian unit responsible in "AGE-C: Aging and Gender in European Cinema" (2023-2027).

Boglárka Angéla Farkas
Profilbild Boglárka Angéla Farkas

© Tibor Danilics

Boglárka Angéla Farkas is a PhD student in Film Studies at Babeș-Bolyai University (Cluj-Napoca, Romania). Along with her mentor, Dr. Andrea Virginás, she worked on several research projects, most predominantly regarding Transylvanian film. Currently, she is involved in two research projects, "AGE-C Ageing and Gender in European Cinema" and "Cultural Traumas in Contemporary European Small National Cinemas".

Host: 
Cornelia Goethe Centrum
GRADE Center Gender
Concept: 
Olena Gepper, Vinzenz Hediger, Asja Makarević
Coordination: 
Amanda Glanert, Mandy Gratz, Johanna Leinius, Mayte Zimmermann
Contact: 
Office

The Cornelia Goethe Colloquia are an open discussion forum for interdisciplinary women's and gender studies. Interested parties are cordially invited!

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CGC Colloquium Winter term 2023 illustration

© „Der Flohmarkt von Madame Claire“ (La dernière folie de Claire Darling, 2018)

01.11.2023
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📽️ Woman at War / Kona fer í stríð
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Mothers (as) Grandmothers in Recent European (Small National) Cinemas
17.01.2024
(Not) Looking One’s Age
31.01.2024
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