unfinishing

著者: Emily Anderson
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  • unfinishing celebrates projects that are incomplete, abandoned, or not public. My guests rediscover and find the value in secret and incomplete schemes. Produced and presented by Emily Anderson Twitter: @TrueBagglerag Instagram: @unfinishingpod Email: unfinishing.pod@gmail.com
    Emily Anderson
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あらすじ・解説

unfinishing celebrates projects that are incomplete, abandoned, or not public. My guests rediscover and find the value in secret and incomplete schemes. Produced and presented by Emily Anderson Twitter: @TrueBagglerag Instagram: @unfinishingpod Email: unfinishing.pod@gmail.com
Emily Anderson
エピソード
  • with Sophia Siddique Harvey. Shirkers, vulnerability, and staying for the credits.
    2024/09/17

    Sophia Siddique is a film scholar whose area of focus is contemporary Southeast Asian cinemas, film phenomenology, and genre (horror and science-fiction). She is an Associate Professor in the Department of Film at Vassar College. Siddique lives with a lovable feline rascal, Magnus, who is her creative muse!


    Sophia’s unfinished project is a film called Shirkers, which she created in the early 1990s alongside Sandi Tan and Jasmine Ng. She met Sandi and Jasmine while studying film at Substation, Singapore’s first independent contemporary arts centre.


    Shirkers is an incomplete film because after shooting was finished the director, Georges Cardona, took the recordings and refused anyone else access to them. The theft meant that Shirkers could never be fully produced and released as a complete feature film. Georges was involved in Shirkers because he taught the film course on which Sophia, Sandi, and Jasmine were enrolled.


    The footage of Shirkers – but crucially not the sound recordings – was eventually recovered decades later. The recovery took place when, after Georges’ death, his ex-wife found and entrusted the film reels back to Sandi, Jasmine, and Sophia.


    Sandi Tan tells that story in her excellent 2018 documentary, which is also called Shirkers and is available on Netflix. It contains lots of footage from the original film (which Sophia calls Shirkers 1.0), and features Sophia talking about her experiences of creating it.


    As Sophia explains in our interview, taking part in the Shirkers documentary (which she refers to as Shirkers 2.0) has allowed her to access whole new ways of thinking about incomplete things, to use exciting experimental forms in her academic work, and to enjoy different, delightful approaches to living creatively.


    Sophia tells me about the variety of emotions and youthful confidence involved in making Shirkers 1.0; about the vulnerability she experienced when watching Shirkers 2.0; about how her experiences with Georges prepared her for working with difficult people later in her career; about the impact of the Shirkers film on how scholars can think about films that are incomplete or no longer exist; and about the importance of staying for the credits when you go to the cinema.


    Links of interest:


    Sophia: https://www.vassar.edu/faculty/soharvey


    Shirkers: https://www.netflix.com/gb/title/80241061


    Incomplete: The Feminist Possibilities of the Unfinished BBC Film, edited by Alix Beeston and Stefan Solomon: https://www.ucpress.edu/books/incomplete/paper


    Giselle Buchanan: http://www.gisellebuchanan.com/about-1


    Allyson Nadia Field, Uplift Cinema: The Emergence of African American Film and the Possibility of Black Modernity: https://www.dukeupress.edu/uplift-cinema


    unfinishing is the podcast about projects that are incomplete, abandoned, works in progress, or not public. It’s presented by Emily Anderson and the ⁠artwork is by Graham Oakes⁠. If you have an incomplete or private project you’d like to talk about, please email unfinishing.pod@gmail.com, contact Em on Instagram @unfinishingpod, or on Twitter @TrueBagglerag.

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    45 分
  • with Robert Hampson. Publishing an unfinished poem (twice).
    2024/07/23
    unfinishing is the podcast about projects that are incomplete, abandoned, or not public. It’s presented by Emily Anderson and the artwork is by Graham Oakes. If you have an incomplete or private project you’d like to talk about, please email unfinishing.pod@gmail.com, contact Em on Instagram @unfinishingpod, or on Twitter @TrueBagglerag. My guest in this episode is Robert Hampson, Professor Emeritus in English Literature at Royal Holloway, University of London, where he began teaching in 1973. Robert has dedicated a very large chunk of his career to studying Joseph Conrad, the author who’s probably best known for his novel Heart of Darkness (1899). Robert tells me about two of his unfinished work on Conrad. One is a possible further critical monograph on Conrad, and the other is a recent Ukrainian edition of Conrad’s works for which Robert wrote the introduction. Two volumes of this edition were published before the Russian invasion, with the war then interrupting the project. We then go on to talk about Robert’s poetry. Robert began writing a volume in the 1970s called seaport, which was published in unfinished form in 1995. Robert returned to seaport during lockdown and has now written a (very long) version of the section that was originally missing. We talk about – among other things – the challenges of picking up an unfinished work decades after it was begun. Finally, we discuss another lockdown poetry project of Robert’s that is unfinished, called covodes. This series was – again – interrupted by the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Robert is also kind enough to give a reading of one of the works in this series. About Robert Robert has been engaged in research on Joseph Conrad since 1971. He has published four critical monographs on Conrad – Joseph Conrad: Betrayal and Identity (1992), Cross-Cultural Encounters in Conrad’s Malay Fiction (2000), Conrad’s Secrets (2012) and Joseph Conrad Cosmopolitanism and Transnationalism (2023) – as well as a critical biography, Joseph Conrad (2020). He has co-edited a number of volumes of essays on Conrad: Conrad and Theory (1998), Conrad and Language (2016), The European Reception of Joseph Conrad (2022) and Conrad’s Cultural Legacy (2024). He is also the current editor of The Conradian. Robert has edited three Conrad texts for Penguin – Lord Jim (1986), Victory (1989) and Heart of Darkness (1995), and two Conrad texts for Wordsworth – Nostromo (2000) and the Lingard Trilogy (2016). He has been on the Editorial Board of the Cambridge Edition of Conrad’s Works since the 1980s. In addition, he has published numerous essays, articles and chapters in books on Conrad. Robert has published some 15 pamphlets of poetry since 1975 as well as five books of poetry: Assembled Fugitives: Selected Poems, 1973-1998 (2001); seaport (1995, 2008); an explanation of colours (2010); reworked disasters (2012); and covodes 1-19 (2021). The volume reworked disasters was long-listed for the Forward Prize, and selections form the covodes have been translated into Italian and published in Italy. Links of interest Robert Hampson: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Gavin_Hampson William Roscoe: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Roscoe William Rothenstein: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Rothenstein Charles Olsen: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Olson
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    48 分
  • with Lorraine Topper. Bras, jock straps, and a dog named...
    2024/06/11

    unfinishing is the podcastabout projects that are incomplete, abandoned, or not public. It’s presented by Emily Anderson and the artwork is by Graham Oakes. If you have an incomplete or private project you’d like to talk about, please email unfinishing.pod@gmail.com, contact Em on Instagram @unfinishingpod, or on Twitter @TrueBagglerag.


    My guest in this episode is Lorraine Topper, who is a writer and a fashion history researcher. She has, for the last decade, focused on clothing stories from the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. Her research has been featured as part of public programmes at the M&S Archive, the V&A, The Courtauld, and the Museum of London.


    After completing a Master’s in History and Culture of Fashion where she wrote tens of thousands of words about underwear, she really wanted to turn her bra history research into book. However, after years of trying and failing, once she finally had a book contract and tried to get stuck into the writing she realised it wasn't the right path for her...


    Links of interest: https://linktr.ee/masterofbras

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    47 分

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