Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Véréna_Paravel> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 54 of
54
with 100 triples per page.
- Véréna_Paravel abstract "Véréna Paravel (born 21 April 1971 in Neuchâtel, Switzerland) is a French anthropologist and artist who works in film, video, and photography.Paravel was born in Neuchâtel, Switzerland, to French parents, and grew up in Algeria, Portugal, Togo, Côte d'Ivoire, the Soviet Union, and France. She taught at the Université de Toulouse, and received her PhD in Anthropology and Communication Sciences from the Université de Toulouse II. She later worked with Bruno Latour at the École Nationale Supérieure des Mines de Paris. In 2004, she moved to the United States, where she had a postdoctoral fellowship at Columbia University.Since 2006, Verena Paravel has worked with Lucien Castaing-Taylor at the Sensory Ethnography Lab at Harvard University. She has been a Lecturer in the Department of Anthropology at Harvard University, and in 2012-13 she was the Frieda L. Miller Fellow in Film, Video, Sound, and New Media at the Film Study Center and the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study. She is also on the master class faculty at the Ecole des Arts Politiques at Sciences Po in Paris. In 2013, she and Castaing-Taylor jointly received the True Vision Award from the True/False Film Festival. Her works in film and video have screened at Berlin, Locarno, New York, Toronto, and other film festivals. They include 7 Queens (2008), Interface Series (2008-10), Foreign Parts (2010), and Leviathan (with Castaing-Taylor, 2012).Recorded during an aimless extended walk beneath the elevated tracks of the #7 subway line in New York City, 7 Queens (2008) wanders in the fragile zone of fleeting relations. Interface Series (2008–10) is a series of five videos filmed entirely through Skype. Foreign Parts (2010) is a non-fiction film about an auto parts junk yard in Queens, New York. Leviathan (2012) is a film about humanity and the sea that is set in the Atlantic Ocean. Foreign Parts was a New York Times Critics’ Pick, and won seven international awards, including the Leopard for Best First Feature and the Best First Feature Jury award at the Festival del Film Locarno (2010) and the Punto de Vista Award for Best Film (2011). Leviathan won twenty international awards. Dennis Lim, in the New York Times, wrote that Leviathan “looks and sounds like no other documentary in history… filmmaking at its most visceral and immersive.” In the Village Voice, Melissa Anderson described it as a “watery knockout,” and argued that “Leviathan explodes the antiquated paradigm of the documentary or ethnographic film.”".
- Véréna_Paravel thumbnail Véréna_Paravel_Viennale_2013.jpg?width=300.
- Véréna_Paravel wikiPageID "40267672".
- Véréna_Paravel wikiPageLength "4406".
- Véréna_Paravel wikiPageOutDegree "21".
- Véréna_Paravel wikiPageRevisionID "633192815".
- Véréna_Paravel wikiPageWikiLink Algeria.
- Véréna_Paravel wikiPageWikiLink Bruno_Latour.
- Véréna_Paravel wikiPageWikiLink Category:French_anthropologists.
- Véréna_Paravel wikiPageWikiLink Category:French_artists.
- Véréna_Paravel wikiPageWikiLink Category:French_photographers.
- Véréna_Paravel wikiPageWikiLink Columbia_University.
- Véréna_Paravel wikiPageWikiLink Cxc3xb4te_dIvoire.
- Véréna_Paravel wikiPageWikiLink France.
- Véréna_Paravel wikiPageWikiLink Harvard_University.
- Véréna_Paravel wikiPageWikiLink Ivory_Coast.
- Véréna_Paravel wikiPageWikiLink Leviathan_(2012_film).
- Véréna_Paravel wikiPageWikiLink Locarno_Film_Festival.
- Véréna_Paravel wikiPageWikiLink Locarno_International_Film_Festival.
- Véréna_Paravel wikiPageWikiLink Lucien_Castaing-Taylor.
- Véréna_Paravel wikiPageWikiLink Neuchâtel.
- Véréna_Paravel wikiPageWikiLink Neuchâtel,_Switzerland.
- Véréna_Paravel wikiPageWikiLink Portugal.
- Véréna_Paravel wikiPageWikiLink Punto_de_Vista_International_Documentary_Film_Festival.
- Véréna_Paravel wikiPageWikiLink Radcliffe_Institute_for_Advanced_Study.
- Véréna_Paravel wikiPageWikiLink Sensory_Ethnography_Lab.
- Véréna_Paravel wikiPageWikiLink Soviet_Union.
- Véréna_Paravel wikiPageWikiLink Togo.
- Véréna_Paravel wikiPageWikiLink University_of_Toulouse.
- Véréna_Paravel wikiPageWikiLink Université_de_Toulouse.
- Véréna_Paravel wikiPageWikiLink File:Véréna_Paravel_Viennale_2013.jpg.
- Véréna_Paravel wikiPageWikiLinkText "Véréna Paravel".
- Véréna_Paravel hasPhotoCollection Véréna_Paravel.
- Véréna_Paravel wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Multiple_issues.
- Véréna_Paravel wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Véréna_Paravel subject Category:French_anthropologists.
- Véréna_Paravel subject Category:French_artists.
- Véréna_Paravel subject Category:French_photographers.
- Véréna_Paravel type Agent.
- Véréna_Paravel type Person.
- Véréna_Paravel type Agent.
- Véréna_Paravel type NaturalPerson.
- Véréna_Paravel type Thing.
- Véréna_Paravel type Q215627.
- Véréna_Paravel type Q5.
- Véréna_Paravel type Person.
- Véréna_Paravel comment "Véréna Paravel (born 21 April 1971 in Neuchâtel, Switzerland) is a French anthropologist and artist who works in film, video, and photography.Paravel was born in Neuchâtel, Switzerland, to French parents, and grew up in Algeria, Portugal, Togo, Côte d'Ivoire, the Soviet Union, and France. She taught at the Université de Toulouse, and received her PhD in Anthropology and Communication Sciences from the Université de Toulouse II.".
- Véréna_Paravel label "Véréna Paravel".
- Véréna_Paravel sameAs m.0d9c30k.
- Véréna_Paravel sameAs Q17013502.
- Véréna_Paravel sameAs Q17013502.
- Véréna_Paravel wasDerivedFrom Véréna_Paravel?oldid=633192815.
- Véréna_Paravel depiction Véréna_Paravel_Viennale_2013.jpg.
- Véréna_Paravel isPrimaryTopicOf Véréna_Paravel.