André Gaudreault
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André Gaudreault (born 23 April 1952) is a Canadian film historian and theorist who holds the Canada Research Chair in Film and Media Studies.


Bibliography

After obtaining a bachelor's degree in 1975 at Université Laval in Quebec City, he continued his studies at Université Sorbonne-Nouvelle, where he did doctoral work under and Michel Colin, obtaining his Ph.D. in 1983 with a dissertation entitled “Récit scriptural, récit théâtral, récit filmique: prolégomènes à une théorie narratologique du cinéma". During his studies, he became familiar with the work of
Gérard Genette Gérard Genette (7 June 1930 – 11 May 2018) was a French literary theorist, associated in particular with the structuralist movement and such figures as Roland Barthes and Claude Lévi-Strauss, from whom he adapted the concept of ''bricolage ...
on narratology and with that of Christian Metz on film semiotics. These two thinkers have exercised a great influence on his work. Following his doctorate, he was named associate professor and later full professor at Université Laval, where he taught until 1991, when he became a full professor at the Université de Montréal. In 1992 he co-founded, with Germain Lacasse, the Groupe de recherche sur l’avènement et la formation des institutions cinématographique et scénique (GRAFICS) and then, in 1997, with three colleagues from the Université de Montréal, the Centre de Recherche sur l’Intermédialité/Centre for Research into Intermediality (CRI), which he headed until 2005. From 1999 to 2016 he was director of the journal ''Cinémas''. In 2007, he co-founded, with Denis Héroux, the ''Observatoire du cinéma au Québec'', a scholarly crossroads which encourages exchange and partnerships between cinema professionals in Quebec and film students. In 2012, he co-founded, with Gilles Mouëllic ( Université Rennes 2) and Maria Tortajada (
Université de Lausanne The University of Lausanne (UNIL; french: links=no, Université de Lausanne) in Lausanne, Switzerland was founded in 1537 as a school of Protestant theology, before being made a university in 1890. The university is the second oldest in Switzer ...
) the international research partnership TECHNÈS, of which he is also the director. Since 2013 he has held the Canada Research Chair in Film and Media Studies. In 2016 he founded the Laboratoire CinéMédias. Currently, he is director of the Programme de recherche sur l’archéologie et la généalogie du montage/editing (PRAGM/e), which he co-founded in 2018. He is or has been a member of various scholarly journal committees, including: ''Les Cahiers de la Cinémathèque'' (Perpignan, France); ''Sociétés & Représentations'' ( Université Panthéon-Sorbonne, France); ''Film History'' ( American Museum of the Moving Image, New York); ''Archivos de la Filmoteca'' (Valencia, Spain); '' Early Popular Visual Culture'' (formerly ''Living Pictures: The Journal of the Popular and Projected Image'', Abingdon, England); ''Cinema & Cie'' (
Università degli Studi di Udine The University of Udine (Italian ''Università degli Studi di Udine'') is a university in the city of Udine, Italy. It was founded in 1978 as part of the reconstruction plan of Friuli after the earthquake in 1976. Its aim was to provide the Friul ...
, Italy); ''Recherches en communication'' (
Université catholique de Louvain The Université catholique de Louvain (also known as the Catholic University of Louvain, the English translation of its French name, and the University of Louvain, its official English name) is Belgium's largest French-speaking university. It ...
, Belgium); and ''1895, Revue de l’Association française de recherche sur l’histoire du cinéma'' (Paris, France).


Work

His work combines a historical and theoretical approach. This dual orientation is at the heart of his principal books, ''Du littéraire au filmique'' (1988; translated in 2009 as ''From Plato to Lumière: Narration and Monstration in Literature and Cinema''); and ''Cinéma et attraction'' (2008; translated in 2011 as ''Film and Attraction: From Kinematography to Cinema''). These volumes examine the earliest years of cinema from both a historiographical and a narratological perspective. His scholarly work forms part of what is known as the “ new film history.” This new approach, which coincided with the emergence of cinema studies in North American universities, was the fruit of young film historians working in the late 1970s. These “new historians” rejected teleological and linear approaches, along with the “great man theory,” which had characterised film history before then. They were driven above all by a concern for scholarly accuracy rather than by cinephilia and based their work on close analysis of period sources (both films and non-film objects) and archival work. In this respect, André Gaudreault's work underscores the importance of the intrication of cultural practices in cinema's genesis. In ''From Plato to Lumière'' (2009
988 Year 988 ( CMLXXXVIII) was a leap year starting on Sunday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. Events By place Byzantine Empire * Fall – Emperor Basil II, supported by a contingent of 6,000 Varangians ...
and ''Film and Attraction'' (2011 008, Gaudreault also emphasised the role of a number of economic, technical and legal contingencies in the emergence and institutionalisation of cinematic practices. Known for the concepts “the cinema of attractions” and “kine-attractography” (“cinématographie-attraction”), André Gaudreault was also one of the first scholars to foreground the concepts “ intermediality” and “ cultural series.”See "''Les vues cinématographiques'' selon Georges Méliès, ou : comment Mitry et Sadoul avaient peut-être raison d’avoir tort (même si c’est surtout Deslandes qu’il faut lire et relire)," in Jacques Malthête et Michel Marie (eds), ''Georges Méliès, l’illusionniste fin de siècle ?'', Presses de la Sorbonne Nouvelle/Colloque de Cerisy, Paris, 1997, pp. 111-131. See also "L'intermédialité du cinématographe," in André Gaudreault, ''Cinéma et attraction'', Paris, CNRS, 2008, pp. 111-144. With François Jost, he is the co-author of ''Le Récit cinématographique'', an introductory volume to narratological theories of cinema which has been republished several times and translated into various languages. Developing terminology borrowed from
Gérard Genette Gérard Genette (7 June 1930 – 11 May 2018) was a French literary theorist, associated in particular with the structuralist movement and such figures as Roland Barthes and Claude Lévi-Strauss, from whom he adapted the concept of ''bricolage ...
, Tzvevetan Todorov and Étienne Souriau, this book explores the different elements of cinematic narrative, such as the filmic narrator, time, space and point of view.
Francesco Casetti Francesco Casetti (born April 2, 1947 in Trento, Italy) is an Italian naturalized US citizen film and television theorist. He is Sterling Professor of Humanities and Film and Media Studies at Yale University. He has been described as "the best an ...
explains: “ audreault and Jost’smerit lies in the analysis of the relation between the narrated story and the act of narration, as well as in the discovery—in the encounter of these two components—of the various forms a story can have". With Philippe Marion, a professor at the
Université catholique de Louvain The Université catholique de Louvain (also known as the Catholic University of Louvain, the English translation of its French name, and the University of Louvain, its official English name) is Belgium's largest French-speaking university. It ...
, he is the author of numerous articles on what the two scholars call the “genealogy of media” and the “double birth of media". This work addresses narrative in early cinema and the institutionalisation of cinematic practices and led to the publication of a volume on cinema's recent transformations in the wake of the “digital revolution.” ''The End of Cinema? A Medium in Crisis in the Digital Age'' (2015 012 examines cinema's many “deaths foretold” and interrogates the impact these periods of transition has had on cinema's very identity.


New film history

Gaudreault's work on early cinema has contributed to the rise of film studies since the 1980s. The famous article he co-wrote with Tom Gunning in 1989, “Le cinéma des premiers temps: un défi à l’histoire du cinéma” (translated in 2006 as history of cinema. In it the authors propose a new way of looking at early cinema, no longer on the basis of a Teleology">teleological approach, founded on aesthetic and discursive criteria completely alien to the pre-1915 context, but rather on the basis of cinema's own language and modalities and the cultural context of the period. Not only did this approach contest the traditional history of cinema; it also implicitly called for a return to period sources and the need to pay particular attention to the context in which the films under study emerged. This article also contributed to popularise the important concept Gaudreault and Gunning developed, the “cinema of attractions” (which Gaudreault contrasts with “institutional cinema”). The cinema of attractions, also described as a “system of monstrative attractions,” stands apart from the later “system of narrative integration” primarily for the self-sufficient and autonomous nature of its shots. As a historian and theorist, Gaudreault seeks to highlight the narrative and formal specificities of cinema while at the same time rejecting, sometimes in polemical fashion, the essentialist approach of film histories (film historians of previous generations, such as Jean Mitry and Georges Sadoul, almost all came out of film criticism). This approach measures this early kinematography against modern cinema, sometimes speaking incorrectly, in French, of “primitive cinema” or “nascent cinema” rather than conceiving it according to its own context. André Gaudreault's earliest research was part of a process of “rediscovering” early cinema by the founders of the “new history.” It resulted in part from his participation in the now legendary 34th FIAF Congress in Brighton in 1978, where hundreds of hitherto practically unknown animated pictures made between 1900 and 1906 were shown. Gaudreault was one of the founders of Domitor (the International Society for the Study of Early Cinema), for which he served as the first elected president from 1987 to 1995. André Gaudreault has written numerous articles on early cinema and what he has called, in reference to the terminology of the period, “kine-attractography” (“cinématographie-attraction”). These articles address topics such as historiography and periodisation; the emergence of editing techniques;André Gaudreault, "De quelques figures de montage dans la production Lumière," in Michel Bouvier, Michel Larouche, and Lucie Roy (eds.), ''Cinéma : acte et présence'', Québec/Lyon, Nota bene/Centre Jacques Cartier, 1999, pp. 27-39. trick effects and mise en scène (in the work of Georges Mélies in particular); film exhibition and the film lecturer; mise en scène and
acting Acting is an activity in which a story is told by means of its enactment by an actor or actress who adopts a character—in theatre, television, film, radio, or any other medium that makes use of the mimetic mode. Acting involves a broad r ...
in animated pictures; sales catalogues and promotional documents; optical toys; etc.


Editing

André Gaudreault has devoted a large part of his career to studying the history of editing practices. After having analysed the development of
crosscutting Cross-cutting is an editing technique most often used in films to establish action occurring at the same time, and often in the same place. In a cross-cut, the camera will cut away from one action to another action, which can suggest the simultane ...
in early cinema, he turned to the stop-camera technique in the work of Méliès, and more precisely to the different forms of abutting and découpage in Lumière pictures. On the basis of the close analysis of animated pictures from before 1905, long described by film historians (in particular Georges Sadoul and Jean Mitry, but not only them) as tableaux without cuts, Gaudreault demonstrated that early cinema frequently resorted to editing, but often with non-narrative ends. These traces of editing were the work of the
camera operator A camera operator, or depending on the context cameraman or camerawoman, is a professional operator of a film camera or video camera as part of a film crew. The term "cameraman" does not imply that a male is performing the task. In filmmaking ...
during the capturing of the event, or of the manufacturer when the film was being prepared in the laboratory, or of the exhibitor, who could cut the film at will. In cinema's early years, editing techniques were often inherited from other contemporary cultural practices, in particular photography,
prestidigitation Sleight of hand (also known as prestidigitation or ''legerdemain'' ()) refers to fine motor skills when used by performing artists in different art forms to entertain or manipulate. It is closely associated with close-up magic, card magic, card f ...
and the
magic lantern The magic lantern, also known by its Latin name , is an early type of image projector that used pictures—paintings, prints, or photographs—on transparent plates (usually made of glass), one or more lenses, and a light source. Because a sin ...
. André Gaudreault's work has underscored the fact that these practices privilege, in the first place, a kind of presentation described as ministrative, in keeping with the logic of a theatrical attraction or a one-act play. Gradually, editing practices came to fulfill a narrative function. This was the case, for example, with crosscutting, which fragments into several different narrative segments the unity of time, space and action found in the theatrical model of the one-act tableau


Cinema of attractions and “kine-attractography”

The cinema of attractions is a thesis formulated by André Gaudreault and Tom Gunning to describe the style of early kinematography. Pictures by
Edison Thomas Alva Edison (February 11, 1847October 18, 1931) was an American inventor and businessman. He developed many devices in fields such as electric power generation, mass communication, sound recording, and motion pictures. These invention ...
, Lumière, Méliès and Urban, and comic scenes by Segundo de Chomón, Émile Cohl, Alice Guy and R.W. Paul, took forms proper to early cinema: the frontality of the mise en scène; the brief, unipunctual nature of the picture, sometimes conceived as a one-act tableau without visible cuts; numerous glances at the camera; the ostentatious nature of comic or fairy-play effects; and an aesthetic of shock, the marvellous or surprise. Gaudreault and Gunning made a distinction between films in which “monstrative attractions” predominated, particularly in pictures made from 1895 to 1905, and those in which a mode of “narrative integration” predominated, particularly in later films. Filmic practices relying more on “monstration” and those in which “narration” dominated were not mutually exclusive. In 2006, on the occasion of the publication of the edited volume ''The Cinema of Attractions Reloaded'', Gaudreault revisited this concept and expressed reservations concerning the teleological nature of the expression “the cinema of attractions.” Because the term “cinema” refers naturally to the institutional practices which took concrete form around 1915, he proposed instead to employ the neologism “kine-attractography,” (from the French expression “cinématographie-attraction,” used for the first time by G.-Michel Coissac in 1925 and adopted by Gaudreault in his writings in French).


Intermediality and cultural series

André Gaudreault approaches the earliest years of cinema and cinema practices from an intermedial perspective. The intermedial approach consists in taking into account contemporaneous cultural practices which inspired or shaped the work of kinematographers. According to him, kinematic practices of the early years were the result of an “intermedial meshing” which encouraged a “hodgepodge of institutions”: “Before the cinema ended up becoming a relatively autonomous medium, kinematography was not merely subjected to the influence of the other media and cultural spaces in vogue at the turn of the twentieth century. It truly was at one and the same time magic lantern show, fairy play, magic act and music hall or vaudeville act. At the beginning of the twentieth century, intermedial meshing was so fertile in the world of kinematography that a great number of animated views paid tribute to other media or media spaces, if only in the topic they were addressing". Initially, kinematic practices were not, properly speaking, cinematic. They acquired a cinematic nature only through necessity, a phenomenon Gaudreault calls cinema's “institutionalisation.” He demonstrates that “institutionalisation” is “an evolutionary and diachronic process that supposes the regulation, regularisation and consolidation of the relationship between those who work in it (stability); the choice of practices that are proper to the medium in question, thereby distinguishing it from other media (specificity); and the setting up of discourses and mechanisms that sanction these relationships and practices (legitimacy)". According to Gaudreault, kinematic practices drew on techniques derived from “ cultural series” of an attractional nature before these practices were constituted as their own “ cultural series.” In his work, “ cultural series” are media practices with specific conventions and uses, such as fairy plays, magic lanterns or
prestidigitation Sleight of hand (also known as prestidigitation or ''legerdemain'' ()) refers to fine motor skills when used by performing artists in different art forms to entertain or manipulate. It is closely associated with close-up magic, card magic, card f ...
. They form more or less extensive and homogeneous ensembles, like stage shows or attractions.


Principal publications

* André Gaudreault and François Jost, ''Le Récit cinématographique: Films et séries télévisées''. Paris: Armand Colin, 2017 (3rd revised and expanded edition of ''Récit cinématographique'', published in 1990 and translated into Spanish, Korean, Chinese and Portuguese). * André Gaudreault and Philippe Marion, ''The End of Cinema? A Medium in Crisis in the Digital Age'' (translation of ''La fin du cinéma?'' by Timothy Barnard). New York: Columbia University Press, 2015 (a volume accompanied by an Internet supplement at theendofcinema.com). * André Gaudreault and Philippe Marion, ''La fin du cinéma? Un média en crise à l’ère du numérique''. Paris: Armand Colin, 2013 (a volume accompanied by an Internet supplement at finducinema.com). * André Gaudreault and Philippe Marion, ''The Kinematic Turn: Film in the Digital Era and its Ten Problems''. Montreal: caboose, 2012. * André Gaudreault, ''Film and Attraction: From Kinematography to Cinema'' (translation of ''Cinéma et attraction'' by Timothy Barnard). Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2011 (with a preface by Rick Altman). * André Gaudreault, ''From Plato to Lumière: Narration and Monstration in Literature and Cinema'' (translation of ''Du littéraire au filmique'' by Timothy Barnard). Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2009 (with a preface by Tom Gunning). * André Gaudreault, ''Cinéma et attraction: Pour une nouvelle histoire du cinématographe''. Paris: CNRS, 2008 (revised and expanded version of a previous version published in Italian under the title ''Cinema delle origini: O della “cinematografia-attrazion”''). * André Gaudreault, ''Cinema delle origini: O della “cinematografia-attrazione”''. Milan: Il Castoro, 2004 (first version of ''Cinéma et attraction'', published directly in Italian in a translation by Viva Paci). * André Gaudreault, ''Du littéraire au filmique: Système du récit''. Paris and Quebec City: Armand Colin/Nota bene, 1999 (revised and expanded 2nd edition, with a preface by
Paul Ricœur Jean Paul Gustave Ricœur (; ; 27 February 1913 – 20 May 2005) was a French philosopher best known for combining phenomenological description with hermeneutics. As such, his thought is within the same tradition as other major hermeneutic ...
and an afterword entitled “Le cinéma: entre littérarité et intermédialité,” pp. 169–83. Translated into Italian, English, Chinese and Spanish).


Editorial responsibilities

* André Gaudreault and Martin Lefebvre (eds.), ''Techniques et technologies du cinéma: Modalités, usages et pratiques des dispositifs cinématographiques à travers l’histoire''. Rennes: Presses universitaires de Rennes, 2015. * André Gaudreault, Laurent Le Forestier and Stéphane Tralongo (eds.), ''Méliès, carrefour des attractions'', followed by a critical edition of ''Correspondance de Georges Méliès (1904-1937)'' established by Jacques Malthête. Rennes: Presses universitaires de Rennes, 2014. * Nicolas Dulac, André Gaudreault and Santiago Hidalgo (eds.), ''A Companion to Early Cinema''. Hoboken: Wiley-Blackwell, 2012. * André Gaudreault (ed.), ''American Cinema, 1890-1909: Themes and Variations'' (the first volume of the series ''Screen Decades: American Culture/American Cinema''). New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 2009. * André Gaudreault, Catherine Russell and Pierre Véronneau (eds.), ''Le Cinématographe, nouvelle technologie du XXe siècle''. Lausanne: Payot Lausanne, 2004. * François Albera, Marta Braun and André Gaudreault (eds.), ''Arrêt sur image, fragmentation du temps: Aux sources de la culture visuelle moderne/Stop Motion: Fragmentation of Time: Exploring the Roots of Modern Cinema''. Lausanne, Payot Lausanne, 2002. * ''La vie ou du moins ses apparences: Émergence du cinéma dans la presse de la Belle Époque''. Montreal: Cinémathèque québécoise/GRAFICS, 2002 (an anthology edited, annotated and with commentary by André Gaudreault and Jean-Pierre Sirois-Trahan). * André Gaudreault, Germain Lacasse and Isabelle Raynauld (eds.), ''Le cinéma en histoire: Institution cinématographique, réception filmique et reconstitution historique''. Paris and Quebec City: Méridiens Klincksieck/Nota bene, 1999. * Claire Dupré La Tour, André Gaudreault and Roberta Pearson (eds.), ''Le Cinéma au tournant du siècle''. Quebec City and Lausanne: Nota Bene/Payot Lausanne, 1999. * André Gaudreault and Thierry Groensteen (eds.), ''La transécriture: Pour une théorie de l’adaptation''. Quebec City and Angoulême: Nota Bene/Centre national de la bande dessinée et de l’image, 1998. * André Gaudreault, Germain Lacasse and Jean-Pierre Sirois-Trahan (eds.), ''Au pays des ennemis du cinéma… Pour une nouvelle histoire des débuts du cinéma au Québec''. Quebec City: Nuit blanche, 1996. * André Gaudreault (ed.), with the collaboration of Tom Gunning and Alain Lacasse, ''Pathé 1900: Fragments d’une filmographie analytique du cinéma des premiers temps''. Paris and Sainte-Foy: Presses de la Sorbonne Nouvelle/Presses de l’Université Laval, 1993. * Roland Cosandey, André Gaudreault and Tom Gunning (eds.), ''Une invention du diable? Cinéma des premiers temps et religion/An Invention of the Devil? Religion and Early Cinema''. Lausanne and Sainte-Foy: Payot Lausanne/Presses de l’Université Laval, 1992. * Jacques Aumont, André Gaudreault and Michel Marie (eds.), ''L’histoire du cinéma: Nouvelles approches''. Paris: Publications de la Sorbonne, 1989. * André Gaudreault (ed.), ''Ce que je vois de mon ciné… La représentation du regard dans le cinéma des premiers temps''. Paris: Méridiens Klincksieck, 1988. * André Gaudreault (ed.), ''Cinema 1900-1906: An Analytical Study'', vol. 2. ''Filmographie analytique/Analytical Filmography''. Brussels: FIAF, 1982.


Honours

* 2022 - Order of Canada, with the rank of Officer. * 2019 - Honorary Doctorate, Université Paul-Valéry Montpellier 3. * 2018 -
Killam Prize The Izaak Walton Killam Memorial Prize was established according to the will of Dorothy J. Killam to honour the memory of her husband Izaak Walton Killam. Five Killam Prizes, each having a value of $100,000, are annually awarded by the Canada Cou ...
in the humanities, awarded by the Canada Council for the Arts to “recognise the career achievements of eminent Canadian scholars and scientists.” * 2017 - Prix Léon Gérin, “the highest distinction, given annually by the Government of Quebec,” in the humanities and social sciences. * 2016 - Named knight in the
Ordre des Arts et des Lettres The ''Ordre des Arts et des Lettres'' (Order of Arts and Letters) is an order of France established on 2 May 1957 by the Minister of Culture. Its supplementary status to the was confirmed by President Charles de Gaulle in 1963. Its purpose is ...
by the French Ministry of Culture. * 2015 - Inclusion in the '' Canadian Who’s Who'', which since 1910 has been publishing the biographies of the most influential Canadians. * 2014 - André Laurendeau Award, given annually to “a researcher to highlight the excellence and impact of his or her work and activities in the humanities.”Manger du cinéma sous tous les formats
" ''Le Devoir'', 2014, October 25th.
* 2014 - Elected to the
Royal Society of Canada The Royal Society of Canada (RSC; french: Société royale du Canada, SRC), also known as the Academies of Arts, Humanities and Sciences of Canada (French: ''Académies des arts, des lettres et des sciences du Canada''), is the senior national, bil ...
(the Arts and Humanities division of the Academy of Arts and Humanities), in recognition of his “exceptional contribution” to intellectual life in Canada. * 2013 - Granted a
Guggenheim Fellowship Guggenheim Fellowships are grants that have been awarded annually since by the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation to those "who have demonstrated exceptional capacity for productive scholarship or exceptional creative ability in the ar ...
, in recognition of his “extraordinary scholarly output.” * 2010 - International Jean Mitry Award, granted annually by the organising committee of the international '' Giornate del Cinema Muto'' festival in Pordenone, Italy, to individuals or institutions who have stood out for the contribution to the preservation and re-evaluation of silent cinema. * 2010 - First French-speaking scholar invited to give the Martin Walsh Memorial Lecture, presented annually by the Film Studies Association of Canada (FSAC) since 1978.Martin Walsh Memorial Lecture
on http://www.filmstudies.ca/
* 1997-1999 - Killam Research Fellowship ( Canada Council for the Arts). * 1994 - AQEC-Olivieri Award (Association québécoise des études cinématographiques and Librairie Olivieri) for the best Quebec film book of the year for ''Pathé 1900: Fragments d’une filmographie analytique du cinéma des premiers temps''.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Gaudreault, Andre 1952 births Writers from Quebec City Canadian film historians Canada Research Chairs Université Laval alumni Academic staff of the Université de Montréal Fellows of the Royal Society of Canada Academic staff of Université Laval 21st-century Canadian historians 21st-century Canadian male writers Chevaliers of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres 20th-century Canadian historians University of Paris alumni Canadian expatriates in France Living people Officers of the Order of Canada People from Outremont, Quebec Recipients of the Prix Léon-Gérin