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IMACS (stylized as I/MA/C/S)[1] is a network, initiated in 2006, of European and American research universities collaborating for research,[2] student exchanges, seminars, publications and delivering the International Master in Cinema Studies, an international graduate programme in film studies that started in 2010. Together with the European Network for Cinema and Media Studies, IMACS also hosts lectures in the fields film and media studies.[3] In 2023, IMACS consists of 17 member institutions in 10 countries.
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International Master in Cinema Studies | |
Formation | 2006 |
---|---|
Fields | Film studies, film theory, media studies |
Membership (2023) | 17 institutions |
Coordinator | Prof Miriam De Rosa |
Students (2022) | 58 |
Website | imacsite |
IMACS aims to unite a series of prestigious, research intensive universities in the scope of academic film theory and history, including Birbeck, University of London, the University of Amsterdam and Université de Montréal. Scholars such as André Gaudreault, Jean-Michel Frodon, Laura Mulvey and Marco Maria Gazzano have held seminars for and contributed to the development of the IMACS network.[4][1]
The IMACS consortium was created by a series of academics with the aim of putting together, under a single name and programme, a series of advanced courses in the fields of film and media studies, and giving students the opportunity to study at three universities of the network, preferably each in a different country.
IMACS started as a bilingual English and French network (located in Wallonia, Quebec and France, half of the founding members use French as primary language) and was originally also titled MIECA (for Maîtrise internationale en études cinématographiques et audiovisuelles). With the addition of new members, the network gradually moved to the exclusive use of English as the lingua franca. In 2023, the consortium is made up of institutions based in France, Italy, Belgium, England and Scotland, Sweden, Spain, the Netherlands, Germany, Brazil and Canada.[5]
The IMACS program is designed as a two-year degree[6] built around seminars that are organised in each participating institution. By completing the IMACS degree, a student will have spent at least half of his studies abroad from the main institution of registration. In Europe, IMACS is facilitated through the Erasmus+ scheme, and in most cases, students obtain grants to travel to the various countries.[7]
The International Master in Cinema Studies is an advanced theoretical program, which aims to prepare students for academic research and doctoral studies. Member institutions are thus not allowed to include any practical classes within their IMACS curriculum.[8] Admission to the program and to each institution is related to the student's research project and planned subject for a thesis.
The IMACS network has set up a series of sixteen modules that correspond to a minimum of subjects that have to be covered during each of the Master program's four academic semesters.[9] This guarantees that in whichever member university a given pupil is studying, the courses' syllabi will have equally covered the minimum material per each subject. Personal research and writing takes a particularly important role, as the final dissertation counts for the equivalent of at least one entire semester.
Admission to the International Master in Cinema Studies is highly selective: for each member of the network, only 2 to 5 students are allowed to be admitted every year.[8]
The IMACS network started in 2006 as the "International Consortium of Audiovisual and Film Studies", with the aim of constructing a common international curriculum in film studies. The latter was launched four years later, in September 2010. It consisted of eleven European universities, and one Canadian, the University of Montréal. The international curriculum was called "International Master in Audiovisual and Cinema Studies" (hence the acronym IMACS) or, in French: "Master international en études cinématographiques et audiovisuelles" (abbreviated MIECA).[8] In the middle of the 2010s, the program was renamed to "International Master in Cinema Studies" (pertaining the short name IMaCS, stylized as I/MA/C/S).
In 2012, the Goethe University of Frankfurt joined the network.[10] The network didn't enlarge further until 2018, when the Brazilian Federal University of Juiz de Fora integrated IMACS,[11] later joined by St Andrews and Stockholm University in 2020,[12] and Ca' Foscari University of Venice in 2021.
Member institution | Department | Country | Year joined |
---|---|---|---|
Birbeck College London | Department of Film, Media and Cultural Studies | United Kingdom | 2010* |
Ruhr University Bochum | Institute for Media Studies | Germany | 2010* |
Pompeu Fabra University | Department of Communication | Spain | 2010* |
Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore | Department of Communication and Performing Arts | Italy | 2010* |
University of Udine | Department of Humanitites and Cultural Heritage Studies | Italy | 2010* |
Roma Tre University | Department of Philosophy, Communication and Performing Arts | Italy | 2010* |
University of Lille | Department Arts | France | 2010* |
University of Liège | Department Media, Culture, Communication | Belgium | 2010* |
Université de Montréal | Department of Art History and Film Studies | Canada | 2013 (Master's)* |
University of Amsterdam | Department Media Studies | Netherlands | 2010* |
Paris Nanterre University | Education and Research Unit PHILLIA | France | 2010* |
Sorbonne Nouvelle University | Film and Audiovisual Department | France | 2010* |
Goethe University Frankfurt | Institute for Theater, Film and Media | Germany | 2012 |
Federal University of Juiz de Fora | Institute of Arts and Design | Brazil | 2018 |
University of St Andrews | Department of Film Studies | United Kingdom | 2020 |
Stockholm University | Institute for Media Studies | Sweden | 2020 |
Ca' Foscari University of Venice | Department of Philosophy and Cultural Heritage | Italy | 2021 |
*founding members.
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