Hello Albert,

Moving Image Review and Art Journal (MIRAJ - ha, ha) is also dedicated to 
experimental moving image work 
(https://www.intellectbooks.com/miraj-the-moving-image-review-art-journal). 
October and Grey Room are not strictly focused on experimental work, nor on the 
moving image, but have both been important academic venues for scholarship in 
that area. The same could be said of Jump Cut, once a print journal now 
entirely online: https://www.ejumpcut.org/home.html. 

I can’t think of any other academic journals that are either exclusively 
dedicated to experimental film/video or are “experimental friendly.” Most 
academic cinema and media studies journals reflect the larger tendency of the 
fields to marginalize this kind of work. It’s rare to see an essay on 
experimental moving image work in the prominent academic journals in the field 
(e.g., JCMS, Quarterly Review of Film and Video, Journal of Film and Video).

Hope this is helpful.
Best,
Jonathan

Dr. Jonathan Walley
Associate Professor and Chair
Department of Cinema
Denison University
https://denison.edu/people/jonathan-walley



> On Nov 10, 2023, at 5:18 AM, Albert Alcoz <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Hello everyone,
> 
> I am writing to ask if you know of international academic journals dedicated 
> to experimental cinema or video art.
> 
> Perhaps university publications have only dealt with these topics in 
> monographic issues.
> 
> There are a few magazines dedicated to this type of cinema (Millennium Film 
> Journal, Found Footage Magazine, Incite!, etc.) but I was curious to discover 
> those journals from the exclusively academic field.
> 
> Thank you so much,
> Albert Alcoz
> --
> http://albertalcoz.com/ <http://www.albertalcoz.com/>
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> Frameworks mailing list
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