Literary Theory: Introduction Part-3
Jibu Mathew George is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Indian and World Literatures, The English and Foreign Languages University, Hyderabad. He holds MA degrees in English Literature, Philosophy and Religion, and Political Science, an MSc degree in Applied Psychology, a PhD on James Joyce, an Advanced Diploma in German, and a Junior Diploma in French. He is currently working on his third book, Why Do Things with Texts, and What to?: Reflections on Contemporary Literary Studies. He was a Research Fellow at the Zürich James Joyce Foundation, Switzerland, in 2008. He also received a DAAD Scholarship for studies at Technische Universität Dresden. His areas of interest include modernism, twentieth-century European fiction in translation, twentieth-century literary theory, continental philosophy, comparative religion, mythology and folklore, life span psychology, Holocaust studies, historiography, and meta-questions in the humanities.
Vinod Verma, born in 1962 in low caste chhippa hand block printing community and a school drop-out when 10 years old and a child-labour for years , he passionately pursued studies , starting with alphabets of English and earning higher education degrees in English Literature. He has been associated with MAC, Univ. Of Delhi (DU), English Department since 2001 till present as Associate Professor. His academic areas include social orders, literature, culture, text & performance, communication designs and audio-visual arts including film-making, photography and other digital arts. Between 1992 and 2000 he ran an NGO for socially and economically under-privileged children’s education. Co-editor of DU textbooks The Individual & Society and Living Literatures, he has researched Dalit writings and critique of social design and hierarchal practices in Bhakti/Mukti Literature in Indian vernaculars for last ten years and shared it in conferences held in India and abroad. He has presented papers in conferences organised by centres of higher education at Oxford, London, Norwich, Beirut, Indiana University, USA India Gateway, Pune and Delhi. He has produced several short documentary and feature films. He is the Chief Editor of a YouTube channel Dalit Voice and Vision and advisor to Dalit magazine Maghar. He is coordinator of the Centre for Performing Arts and Cultural Studies in MAC, Univ. of Delhi. His published works include critical papers on Dalit Literature, Kabir, poetry, drawings, book cover designs, digital paintings, photographs and films. He also conducts workshops on Dalit Arts, Visual Design, Film Appreciation, Performing Arts and Photography & Film-Making.
3 Irish pubs that were shipped abroad
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Creating a true Irish identity in one of the thousands of Irish pubs around the world is a difficult thing to do, but we’ve found 3 that took the rather extreme option of packing up an existing pub and shipping it across Europe, Africa, and America to make people feel right at home.
1. Bubbles O'Leary's - Kampala, Uganda:
Bubbles O’Learys, named after a former teacher of owner Nigel Sutton, is the only Irish bar in Kampala, Uganda. According to The Irish Mirror, Nigel bought all the furniture, the bar, the cold room, the stools, and the front door from The Linen Hall pub in Drogheda, County Louth.
He got 2 builders to dismantle the whole thing, fit it into a 40 foot container, and ship it to Uganda to be reconstructed as Bubbles O’Leary’s bar. They were waiting 8 weeks for the container to arrive, but when it did the work was done quite quickly. The bar opened to the public in August 2003.
2. Ronald Reagan's Pub, California
Then president, Ronald Reagan, paid a visit in 1984 to Ballyporeen, Co.Tipperary, where some of his Irish ancestors hailed from. Customary as it is for American presidents to have a pint in an Irish pub when they visit, his advance team found that O’Farrells pub in the village had a room named after the President, ‘The Ronald Reagan salon’. Reagan visited and sipped a pint of Smithwicks and off he went back on the campaign trail. The bar was later renamed ‘Ronald Reagan’s’ in his honour.
Some years later, June 2004, a a member of the board of trustees of the Reagan foundation and museum paid a visit back to Ballyporeen to find that the pub was closed and up for sale. He offered the owners $100,000 and the pub was now in the possession of the Reagan foundation. They packed up all the paraphernalia, furniture, and other bits and sent it to California to be put on display in the Reagan foundation museum. It’s still there today with the same bar, stools, and other fixtures. The O’Farrell family went to the unveiling of the relocated bar and poured the first pint of Smithwicks from the taps.
3. James Joyce Bar, Zurich
We have to credit our friends at the ‘Come Here To Me’ blog for this great story of the moving of the bar from Jurys Hotel on Dame street to a the James Joyce bar in Zurich. The antique bar in Jurys hotel was put up for sale when the hotel was being closed to make way for the new Central Bank building. The bar was bought by a group of businessmen from Zurich who arranged for the bar to be shipped in it’s entirety to Switzerland.
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Literary Theory Introduction Part-2
Jibu Mathew George is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Indian and World Literatures, The English and Foreign Languages University, Hyderabad. He holds MA degrees in English Literature, Philosophy and Religion, and Political Science, an MSc degree in Applied Psychology, a PhD on James Joyce, an Advanced Diploma in German, and a Junior Diploma in FrenchHe is currently working on his third book, Why Do Things with Texts, and What to?: Reflections on Contemporary Literary Studies. He was a Research Fellow at the Zürich James Joyce Foundation, Switzerland, in 2008. He also received a DAAD Scholarship for studies at Technische Universität Dresden. His areas of interest include modernism, twentieth-century European fiction in translation, twentieth-century literary theory, continental philosophy, comparative religion, mythology and folklore, life span psychology, Holocaust studies, historiography, and meta-questions in the humanities.
Vinod Verma, born in 1962 in low caste chhippa hand block printing community and a school drop-out when 10 years old and a child-labourer for years , he passionately pursued studies , starting with alphabets of English and earning higher education degrees in English Literature. He has been associated with MAC, Univ. Of Delhi (DU), English Department since 2001 till present as Associate Professor. His academic areas include social orders, literature, culture, text & performance, communication designs and audio-visual arts including film-making, photography and other digital arts. Between 1992 and 2000 he ran an NGO for socially and economically under-privileged children’s education. Co-editor of DU textbooks The Individual & Society and Living Literatures, he has researched Dalit writings and critique of social design and hierarchical practices in Bhakti/Mukti Literature in Indian vernaculars for last ten years and shared it in conferences held in India and abroad. He has presented papers in conferences organised by centres of higher education at Oxford, London, Norwich, Beirut, Indiana University, USA India Gateway, Pune and Delhi. He has produced several short documentary and feature films. He is the Chief Editor of a YouTube channel Dalit Voice and Vision and advisor to Dalit magazine Maghar. He is coordinator of the Centre for Performing Arts and Cultural Studies in MAC, Univ. of Delhi. His published works include critical papers on Dalit Literature, Kabir, poetry, drawings, book cover designs, digital paintings, photographs and films. He also conducts workshops on Dalit Arts, Visual Design, Film Appreciation, Performing Arts and Photography & Film-Making.
Literary Theory Introduction Part-1
Jibu Mathew George is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Indian and World Literatures, The English and Foreign Languages University, Hyderabad. He holds MA degrees in English Literature, Philosophy and Religion, and Political Science, an MSc degree in Applied Psychology, a PhD on James Joyce, an Advanced Diploma in German, and a Junior Diploma in FrenchHe is currently working on his third book, Why Do Things with Texts, and What to?: Reflections on Contemporary Literary Studies. He was a Research Fellow at the Zürich James Joyce Foundation, Switzerland, in 2008. He also received a DAAD Scholarship for studies at Technische Universität Dresden. His areas of interest include modernism, twentieth-century European fiction in translation, twentieth-century literary theory, continental philosophy, comparative religion, mythology and folklore, life span psychology, Holocaust studies, historiography, and meta-questions in the humanities.
Vinod Verma, born in 1962 in low caste chhippa hand block printing community and a school drop-out when 10 years old and a child-labourer for years , he passionately pursued studies , starting with alphabets of English and earning higher education degrees in English Literature. He has been associated with MAC, Univ. Of Delhi (DU), English Department since 2001 till present as Associate Professor. His academic areas include social orders, literature, culture, text & performance, communication designs and audio-visual arts including film-making, photography and other digital arts. Between 1992 and 2000 he ran an NGO for socially and economically under-privileged children’s education. Co-editor of DU textbooks The Individual & Society and Living Literatures, he has researched Dalit writings and critique of social design and hierarchical practices in Bhakti/Mukti Literature in Indian vernaculars for last ten years and shared it in conferences held in India and abroad. He has presented papers in conferences organised by centres of higher education at Oxford, London, Norwich, Beirut, Indiana University, USA India Gateway, Pune and Delhi. He has produced several short documentary and feature films. He is the Chief Editor of a YouTube channel Dalit Voice and Vision and advisor to Dalit magazine Maghar. He is coordinator of the Centre for Performing Arts and Cultural Studies in MAC, Univ. of Delhi. His published works include critical papers on Dalit Literature, Kabir, poetry, drawings, book cover designs, digital paintings, photographs and films. He also conducts workshops on Dalit Arts, Visual Design, Film Appreciation, Performing Arts and Photography & Film-Making.
Literary Theory Introduction Part-4
Jibu Mathew George is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Indian and World Literatures, The English and Foreign Languages University, Hyderabad. He holds MA degrees in English Literature, Philosophy and Religion, and Political Science, an MSc degree in Applied Psychology, a PhD on James Joyce, an Advanced Diploma in German, and a Junior Diploma in French. He is currently working on his third book, Why Do Things with Texts, and What to?: Reflections on Contemporary Literary Studies. He was a Research Fellow at the Zürich James Joyce Foundation, Switzerland, in 2008. He also received a DAAD Scholarship for studies at Technische Universität Dresden. His areas of interest include modernism, twentieth-century European fiction in translation, twentieth-century literary theory, continental philosophy, comparative religion, mythology and folklore, life span psychology, Holocaust studies, historiography, and meta-questions in the humanities.
Vinod Verma, born in 1962 in low caste chhippa hand block printing community and a school drop-out when 10 years old and a child-labour for years , he passionately pursued studies , starting with alphabets of English and earning higher education degrees in English Literature. He has been associated with MAC, Univ. Of Delhi (DU), English Department since 2001 till present as Associate Professor. His academic areas include social orders, literature, culture, text & performance, communication designs and audio-visual arts including film-making, photography and other digital arts. Between 1992 and 2000 he ran an NGO for socially and economically under-privileged children’s education. Co-editor of DU textbooks The Individual & Society and Living Literatures, he has researched Dalit writings and critique of social design and hierarchical practices in Bhakti/Mukti Literature in Indian vernaculars for last ten years and shared it in conferences held in India and abroad. He has presented papers in conferences organised by centres of higher education at Oxford, London, Norwich, Beirut, Indiana University, USA India Gateway, Pune and Delhi. He has produced several short documentary and feature films. He is the Chief Editor of a YouTube channel Dalit Voice and Vision and adviser to Dalit magazine Maghar. He is coordinator of the Centre for Performing Arts and Cultural Studies in MAC, Univ. of Delhi. His published works include critical papers on Dalit Literature, Kabir, poetry, drawings, book cover designs, digital paintings, photographs and films. He also conducts workshops on Dalit Arts, Visual Design, Film Appreciation, Performing Arts and Photography & Film-Making.
Literary Theory: Introduction Part-6
Jibu Mathew George is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Indian and World Literatures, The English and Foreign Languages University, Hyderabad. He holds MA degrees in English Literature, Philosophy and Religion, and Political Science, an MSc degree in Applied Psychology, a PhD on James Joyce, an Advanced Diploma in German, and a Junior Diploma in French. He is currently working on his third book, Why Do Things with Texts, and What to?: Reflections on Contemporary Literary Studies. He was a Research Fellow at the Zürich James Joyce Foundation, Switzerland, in 2008. He also received a DAAD Scholarship for studies at Technische Universität Dresden. His areas of interest include modernism, twentieth-century European fiction in translation, twentieth-century literary theory, continental philosophy, comparative religion, mythology and folklore, life span psychology, Holocaust studies, historiography, and meta-questions in the humanities.
Vinod Verma, born in 1962 in low caste chhippa hand block printing community and a school drop-out when 10 years old and a child-labour for years , he passionately pursued studies , starting with alphabets of English and earning higher education degrees in English Literature. He has been associated with MAC, Univ. Of Delhi (DU), English Department since 2001 till present as Associate Professor. His academic areas include social orders, literature, culture, text & performance, communication designs and audio-visual arts including film-making, photography and other digital arts. Between 1992 and 2000 he ran an NGO for socially and economically under-privileged children’s education. Co-editor of DU textbooks The Individual & Society and Living Literatures, he has researched Dalit writings and critique of social design and hierarchical practices in Bhakti/Mukti Literature in Indian vernaculars for last ten years and shared it in conferences held in India and abroad. He has presented papers in conferences organised by centres of higher education at Oxford, London, Norwich, Beirut, Indiana University, USA India Gateway, Pune and Delhi. He has produced several short documentary and feature films. He is the Chief Editor of a YouTube channel Dalit Voice and Vision and adviser to Dalit magazine Maghar. He is coordinator of the Centre for Performing Arts and Cultural Studies in MAC, Univ. of Delhi. His published works include critical papers on Dalit Literature, Kabir, poetry, drawings, book cover designs, digital paintings, photographs and films. He also conducts workshops on Dalit Arts, Visual Design, Film Appreciation, Performing Arts and Photography & Film-Making.
Unit 909 - Pilot
The first episode of our new series, Unit 909.
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Lighthouse: A development retrospective - Mike Hearn - Zürich
Bitcoin Meetup Zürich, 10. February 2015 at Rackspacke Office
Beer tip jar: 1H6QSmrq4KQJs3CdMGPQoYDriHwJfy7aVS
Literary Theory: Introduction Part-5
Jibu Mathew George is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Indian and World Literatures, The English and Foreign Languages University, Hyderabad. He holds MA degrees in English Literature, Philosophy and Religion, and Political Science, an MSc degree in Applied Psychology, a PhD on James Joyce, an Advanced Diploma in German, and a Junior Diploma in French. He is currently working on his third book, Why Do Things with Texts, and What to?: Reflections on Contemporary Literary Studies. He was a Research Fellow at the Zürich James Joyce Foundation, Switzerland, in 2008. He also received a DAAD Scholarship for studies at Technische Universität Dresden. His areas of interest include modernism, twentieth-century European fiction in translation, twentieth-century literary theory, continental philosophy, comparative religion, mythology and folklore, life span psychology, Holocaust studies, historiography, and meta-questions in the humanities.
Vinod Verma, born in 1962 in low caste chhippa hand block printing community and a school drop-out when 10 years old and a child-labour for years , he passionately pursued studies , starting with alphabets of English and earning higher education degrees in English Literature. He has been associated with MAC, Univ. Of Delhi (DU), English Department since 2001 till present as Associate Professor. His academic areas include social orders, literature, culture, text & performance, communication designs and audio-visual arts including film-making, photography and other digital arts. Between 1992 and 2000 he ran an NGO for socially and economically under-privileged children’s education. Co-editor of DU textbooks The Individual & Society and Living Literatures, he has researched Dalit writings and critique of social design and hierarchal practices in Bhakti/Mukti Literature in Indian vernaculars for last ten years and shared it in conferences held in India and abroad. He has presented papers in conferences organised by centres of higher education at Oxford, London, Norwich, Beirut, Indiana University, USA India Gateway, Pune and Delhi. He has produced several short documentary and feature films. He is the Chief Editor of a YouTube channel Dalit Voice and Vision and advisor to Dalit magazine Maghar. He is coordinator of the Centre for Performing Arts and Cultural Studies in MAC, Univ. of Delhi. His published works include critical papers on Dalit Literature, Kabir, poetry, drawings, book cover designs, digital paintings, photographs and films. He also conducts workshops on Dalit Arts, Visual Design, Film Appreciation, Performing Arts and Photography & Film-Making.
AIDS Artist Charity Night 2010 @ Zürich Maag Hall
AIDS Artist Charity Night 2010 @ Zürich Maag Hall more @ queerlesque.de
Professor Torsten Passie - The Science of Microdosing Psychdelics, A short review
In 2011, Jim Fadiman PhD described the intake of very low doses of psychedelics (e.g. 10–20 mcg of LSD). Claims about “microdosing” include better work performance, less procrastination, better mood, more creativity, psychological well-being and healthier life habits.
This lecture provides a rough overview on the history of microdosing and describes existing research on the effects of low doses of LSD, psilocybin and mescaline. Including; the place of microdosing and minidosing in the context of pharmacology, effects of psychedelics on the human psyche and organism, possible effects on performance, creativity, headaches, anxiety and depression, side effects and mechanisms of action, and concluding with thoughts on microdosing as a socio-psychological phenomenon assimilating psychedelics in our culture.
Torsten Passie MD, PhD is Professor of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy at Hannover Medical School (Germany) and currently Visiting Scientist at Goethe University in Frankfurt/Main (Germany).
He studied philosophy, sociology (MA) at Leibniz-University, Hannover and medicine at Hannover Medical School. He worked at the Psychiatric University Clinic in Zürich (Switzerland) and with Professor Hanscarl Leuner (Göttingen), the leading European authority on hallucinogenic drugs.
From 1998 to 2010 he was a scientist and psychiatrist at Hannover Medical school (Germany) where he researched the addictions and the psychophysiology of altered states of consciousness and their healing potential, including clinical research with hallucinogenic drugs (cannabis, ketamine, nitrous oxide, psilocybin). In 2012-2015 he was Visiting Professor at Harvard Medical School (Boston, USA).
Filmed at Breaking Convention 2019. Sponsored by the Beckley Foundation.
Why Shabbat? By Joyce Azria
Why Shabbat? Joyce Azria, creative director of BCBGeneration, tells us why she's #KeepingItTogether.
Mantronix Basseline 1986
Mantronix baseline 1986 oldskool disco Rapmusic
The Wild Ones Series, Episode 04: Women Camaraderie at WeSpace Zurich
Episode Four of The Wild Ones Series features two doctors and co-founders of Wespace, Dr. Estefania Tapias and Dr. Laura Seifert who are on a mission to help women advance across a variety of disciplines. WeSpace is a community, workspace and digital platform inspired by women professionals to nurture leadership, collaboration, and innovation.
What makes them wild? Well, when you live in a country where some women had to wait until 1991 to vote, I’d say you’re challenging the structures by simply advancing equality.
Hope you enjoy this episode as Estefania takes me on a walk around the heart of Zurich and Laura shares her views as we make our way back to WeSpace.
ABOUT MEGAN KOVAL
New York based but location independent pathfinder helping individuals, businesses and entrepreneurs all around the world carve their paths, build their brands, and tell their stories.
ABOUT PERSONAL PATHFINDING + DESIGN
Branding studio that leverages who you are: Specializing in brand coaching, storytelling, brand identity, design, packaging, website, patterns and more.
ABOUT THE WILD ONES SERIES
The Wild Ones is a traveling video series from me, Megan Koval, following the paths of those that answer the call of the wild. In each episode, I’ll travel to a different corner of the world and meet up with a local wild one where they’ll take me on a walk in their neighborhood, share how they’re carving their own path and forging their own way.
ABOUT WESPACE
WeSpace is a community, workspace and digital platform inspired by women professionals to nurture leadership, collaboration, and innovation. We are a women-centric platform where everyone can participate and co-create.
Follow WeSpace on Instagram @we_are_wespace
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wearewespace.com
Dada
Dada /ˈdɑːdɑː/ or Dadaism was an art movement of the European avant-garde in the early 20th century. Many claim Dada began in Zurich, Switzerland in 1916, spreading to Berlin shortly thereafter but the height of New York Dada was the year before, in 1915. To quote Dona Budd's The Language of Art Knowledge,
Dada was born out of negative reaction to the horrors of World War I. This international movement was begun by a group of artists and poets associated with the Cabaret Voltaire in Zurich. Dada rejected reason and logic, prizing nonsense, irrationality and intuition. The origin of the name Dada is unclear; some believe that it is a nonsensical word. Others maintain that it originates from the Romanian artists Tristan Tzara's and Marcel Janco's frequent use of the words da, da, meaning yes, yes in the Romanian language. Another theory says that the name Dada came during a meeting of the group when a paper knife stuck into a French-German dictionary happened to point to 'dada', a French word for 'hobbyhorse'.
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How Kagame Left Davos to Inaugurate a Very Important School Back Home
From Davos where he has been attending the World Economic Forum (WEF), President Paul Kagame has inaugurated the University of Global Health Equity (UGHE) located in Burera district – Northern Rwanda.
Kagame told participants at the event – Friday, that his presence is a testimony he attaches to the school and a very big importance because it was not that easy to make it.
Last night in Davos, the President informed organizers of the summit that he had to fly back home before the end of presentations, because he had a key event to grace.
“I was in Davos up to close 9 o’clock. I kept bargaining because I was told that Zurich airport shuts down at 11 o ‘clock yet the drive from where I was is 2.5 hours,” Kagame said adding that in the end, organizers allowed him to leave the summit almost three hours earlier.
“I told the authority that were responsible, that it’s not that I am important myself but what I am going to do is very important.”
To be very specific and convince the summit, which was addressing issues of inequity in the world, Kagame told his colleagues in Davos that the event he was going to attend is a solution to inequities.
“I was referring to this university and the work that you do,” Kagame said.
This explanation was very important and no one would resist the idea that Kagame had to fly back home. So, he hit the road to Zurich airport.
“We drove a bit fast and arrived on time, almost two minutes to time,” he said.
The plane touched down at Kigali International Airport at 8am.
The president thanked all those that contributed to the existence of the University of Global Health Equity.
“I congratulate all those involved in transforming this bold vision into the beautiful reality that we are inaugurating today,” Kagame said.
“In particular, I want to express our special appreciation to Bill and Joyce Cummings for their generous support and personal involvement, over many years. We are happy to have you here with us today.”
The Joyce and Cummings Foundation has become loyal partner of Rwanda’s health initiatives in quite many areas.
“I also thank Bill and Melinda Gates, and the Gates Foundation, for their financial support for this project, and their sustained advocacy for good health outcomes in Rwanda, and around the world,” the president said.
The speech of the president came after Melinda Gates had shared through a video she sent, her happiness to have UGHE launched.
The president also thanked Paul Farmer, the co-founder and Chief strategist of Partners In Health (PIH) of which UGHE is a subsidiary.
“Paul Farmer and the Partners in Health team, together with Rwandan partners, have once again demonstrated, that they follow through on their commitments, and get things done. Your efforts are raising the standard, globally, on equity in healthcare,” Kagame said.
European Road Trip, 1920s - Film 47857
France and Switzerland, Europe
Rheims Cathedral
Verdun visiting the ruins of the world war one battlefield and Perhaps the Verdun church or memorial in construction
The caves under Donaumont fort and a soldier guarding is not happy our tourist is there
Metz
Road from Strasbourg to Zurich
Strasbourg
snowy mountain passes Finka Pass Jungfrau Interlaken
Zurich
Berne
Geneva
Vlog #1 (WELG in Geneva, Switzerland)
Last week I went to a conference called WELG, I took some shots from my week in Switzerland, Geneva. The video contains a mix of the conference, the city and having fellowship with other friends from other bases. Hope you enjoy it.
Qantas Jumbo Joy flight 747 #theqantasjumbojoyflight
The Qantas Jumbo Joy flight takes physically and intellectually disabled children, as well as kids in care and from the bush, for a mystery flight around the state.
The Qantas Jumbo Joy Flight gives 350 disabled or disadvantaged children what is often their only opportunity to experience the sensation of flying. This one hour flight in a Jumbo 747 is an annual event, and takes children nominated by schools, charities and other community groups supporting disadvantaged or disabled children.
Organised by the Rotary Club of Turramurra and the Pathfinders Auxiliary ,the project is supported by Qantas, Sydney Airport, Shell and Air Services Australia. Funds raised are donated to the Royal Institute for Deaf & Blind Children, and other Rotary projects. Donations will be receipted by Turramurra Rotary Foundation, a deductible gift recipient. Donations of $2 or more are tax deductible.
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EXKLUSIV: BRUNO MANSER – Sven Schelker & Niklaus Hilber | ZFF Daily 2019
Fast vier Monate verbrachte die Filmcrew von «BRUNO MANSER – DIE STIMME DES REGENWALDES» im Dschungel von Indonesien. Dabei drehten sie mit indigenen Penan. Niklaus Hilber und Sven Schelker erzählen von den eindrücklichsten und herausfordernsten Momenten.
Das Zurich Film Festival bietet eine Plattform für die vielversprechendsten neuen Filmemacher/innen aus der ganzen Welt. Es hat sich zum Ziel gesetzt, den Austausch zwischen aufstrebenden Regisseur/innen, arrivierten Filmschaffenden, der Filmindustrie und dem Publikum zu fördern. Das ZFF präsentiert jeden Herbst die schönsten Entdeckungen sowie die meist erwarteten Filme des Jahres.
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Cast / Audiovisual Media ist eine Fachrichtung der Zürcher Hochschule der Künste. Unter der Leitung von Torben Jacobsen, Nadia Holdener, Caroline Feder und Leandro Russo produzieren und planen die Studierenden des 3. und 5. Semesters Videobeiträge für «ZFF Daily». Dabei wenden sie ihre Kenntnisse in Animation, Schnitt, Kameraführung und Social Media an, welche sie sich während des Studiums angeeignet haben.
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The «Zurich Film Festival» brings together filmmakers, directors, the film industry and the audience in Zurich. In addition to national and international films, a variety of movies from this year’s guest country Italy are shown in the section «New World View». Film screenings in the presence of filmmakers or the public «ZFF Masters» let the audience be closer to the stars as well as young filmmakers.
Further information:
Cast / Audiovisual Media is a subject area at the Zurich University of the Arts. Under the direction of Torben Jacobsen, Nadia Holdener, Caroline Feder and Leandro Russo, the students in the 3rd and 5th semester create audiovisual content for «ZFF Daily». They use their knowledge in animation, editing, filming and social media acquired during their studies.
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