Other Screenings
Spain in Crisis: The Spanish Crash and the “Indignados” Movement, NYCOct 18–Oct 19
Measures to pull Spain out of its current financial crisis are failing to bear fruit and exacerbating social tensions. While some are optimistic, the core problems remain; many debate possible solutions, while others leave the country looking for a better life.
This two-day program, the first of its kind, showcases the Spanish crash from different perspectives: an analytical view through the eyes of serious journalism; a piece aimed at recruiting investors produced by a consulting firm; a collective film on the 15M movement proving that the group is vital and has a strong and well- articulated philosophy behind it; and artistic responses created by influential international Spanish artists working today such as Basilio Martín Patino, Mercedes Álvarez, and Isaki Lacuesta. The screenings will be followed by a panel of scholars with specialist expertise in the field. Welcome to today’s Spain!
This film program is presented by Pragda and NYU’s King Juan Carlos I of Spain Center, with the special support of DOCMA, Asociación de Cine Documental.
Round Table followed by Q&A and reception on Saturday, October 19 at 7:00 pm. –Moderator: Bryan Cameron (NYU); Speakers: German Labrador (Princeton U.), Pablo La Parra (NYU), Luis Moreno-Caballud (U. Penn.)
Saturday, October 19
7:00 pm – Round Table followed by Q&A and reception.
Moderator: Bryan Cameron (NYU)
Speakers: Germán Labrador (Princeton University), “Think of a White Elephant: Aesthetics of the Spanish Crisis and Foreign Debt in Documentary Film Production;” Pablo La Parra (NYU), “Logical Revolts: Rethinking Democracy in post-15M Spain;” Luis Moreno-Caballud (University of Pennsylvania), “Cultures of Anyone: The Spanish Indignado Movement and Its Contexts”
PARTICIPANTS’ BIOS
Bryan Cameron is an Assistant Professor/Faculty Fellow of Spanish and Portugues in NYU. His areas of Research include Contemporary Spanish cultures; literary and film theory; urban imaginaries; the production of monumental space; the intersection of politics and (non-)narrative; crises surrounding modernity; reproduction and (anti-)genealogical nationalisms, comparative approaches to the nineteenth-century novel; anti-Francoist cultural production. Cameron’s current book-length project, Paternity Tests: Destabilized Authority in the Late-Nineteenth-Century Spanish Novel, examines the allegory of literary parentage in novels by Leopoldo Alas (“Clarín”), Vicente Blasco Ibáñez, Eduardo López Bago, Narcís Oller, Benito Pérez Galdós, Alejandro Sawa, and José Zahonero following the decay of the liberal program launched by the Revolution of 1868. He is also developing a number of article-length essays on political dissidence and censorship in (anti-)Francoist cinema by understudied directors such as Pere Portabella, Carlos Durán, Jacinto Esteva, Gonzalo Suárez, and Joaquim Jordà.
Germán Labrador Méndez (Ph.D. Spanish Literature, Universidad de Salamanca, Spain) is an Assistant Professor in Modern and Contemporary Peninsular Literature. Before joining Princeton University in 2008, he taught at Universidad de Salamanca (Spain) and was a Visiting Scholar at Berkeley University and at New York University. His teaching and research interests include post-dictatorial Spanish cultural studies, the Avant-Garde and Modernity in Spain, and twentieth-century Spanish literature. He has published Letras arrebatadas. Poesía y química en la transición española (Madrid: Devenir, 2008), a study of poetic and politic practices under the influence in the cultural atmosphere of the 1970’s in Spain. He has also published several articles on subjects such as cinema and collective memories, cultural communities and poetry, popular cultures, the Spanish La Movida, contemporary poetry and genealogies of Peninsular Modernity in authors such as Torres Villarroel, Camilo Pessanha or Agostinho da Silva. He is currently working on a book on counter-culture, policy and aesthetics during the Spanish transition to democracy, and a book about the role of tobacco in Baroque culture in the Seventeenth-Century Spain.
Pablo La Parra Pérez is a Ph.D. candidate at NYU. He holds a BA in Art History (2010: Universitat de València, Spain) and a Master’s degree in Comparative Studies of Literature, Art and Philosophy (2011: Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Spain). His master’s thesis analyzed the project Megafone.net by contemporary Catalan artist Antoni Abad from the perspective of Jacques Rancière’s aesthetic and political ideas. Before joining NYU, he collaborated with the Department of Archives and Conferences at the Center for Contemporary Culture of Barcelona (CCCB). His research interests include visual culture, art theory, aesthetics, radical political theory, and contemporary Spanish cultural studies.
Luis Moreno-Caballud is an Assistant Professor of Romance Languages at the University of Pennsylvania where he teaches modern and contemporary Spanish cultures, critical theory, socio-formalist approaches to literature and film, media studies, popular and participatory cultures, theories of cooperation, network societies and the commons, new technologies and activism. Moreno-Caballud investigates the social construction of meaning during the 20th and 21st centuries in Spain, paying special attention to the power of literary and cinematographic interventions to question and redraw the limits of what is perceived as possible in the social sphere.His research focuses on the cultural transformations brought by processes of capitalist modernization and neoliberal crisis in Spain. In a further line of research, he focuses on the cultural legacy of rural Spain after the transformation of the country into a modern, consumerist, and urban-centered society. He has published papers engaging these and other subjects in academic journals such as Revista Hispánica Moderna, Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hispánicos, Anales de la Literatura Española Contemporánea, and Siglo XXI: Literatura y Cultura Españolas. He has also published articles about the current Spanish crisis and the “indignados” movement in several newspapers.
Where
The King Juan Carlos I of Spain Center
53 Washington Square S, New York, NY 10012
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Admission
Free
Schedule
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18
6:00 pm – Screening 1
The Great Spanish Crash
Another Point of View
7:15 pm – Screening 2
Futures Market
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19
4:00 pm – Screening 3
15M: Excellent. Wake-Up Call. Important.
5:30 pm – Screening 4
Free I Love You
Spanish Revolution?
7:00 pm – Round Table followed by Q&A and reception.