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Abstract
Utilizing a range of Japanese and English-language historical sources as well as recent scholarship on the trade and cultivation of camphor and turpentine, this article explores some of the vegetal materialities on which celluloid film – and thus also early cinema – depended. Camphor is a plasticizer for cellulose nitrate; turpentine is the raw material for making synthetic camphor. I argue that understanding camphor and pine trees as both industrial commodities and as living, growing things can help direct our care and attention to all the life involved in making cinema, and to the importance of growth in it. It may also help us delineate the contours of a more equitable geography of film.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Title of host publication | Cinematic Ecosystems: Screen Encounters with More-than-Humans in the Era of Environmental Crisis |
| Editors | Mary Hegedus, Jessica Mulvogue |
| Place of Publication | Wilmington, DE |
| Publisher | Vernon Press |
| Pages | 3-26 |
| ISBN (Print) | 979-8-8819-0373-2 |
| Publication status | Published - 2026 |
Funding
| Funders | Funder number |
|---|---|
| NWO | VI.Veni.221C.026 |
Keywords
- history of celluloid film manufacturing
- media materiality
- degrowth
- vegetal entanglements
- elemental geopolitics
- photochemical industry
- photochemical cinema
- film history
- environmental humanities
- agriculture
- Taiwan
- Japan
- colonialism
- extractivism
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CINEAGRI: Global Elements of Cinema - Tracing Agricultural Materials in the History of Celluloid Film Manufacturing
Jancovic, M. (Principal Investigator)
1/01/24 → 31/12/26
Project: Research