A magyarországi részvételi filmkultúra története és jelenlegi gyakorlatai, különös
tekintettel a ...(131868) Támogató: OTKA/ NKFIH
This paper presents a participatory film intervention focused on young people, which
was held within the framework of a grant coordinated by the Minor Media/Culture Research
Centre and took place in the form of a summer camp in 2021. After revisiting some
historical examples and definitions of participatory film, the author focuses on the
concept of displacement as used in film theory and psychology, which he attempts to
redefine and thereby reverse its negative connotations. The author analyses the catalyst
method, one of the various forms of implementing participatory video as a visual research
method, which was the one used in the research described here. The participatory film
methodology based on the camera-as-catalyst is meant to foster inter-group collaboration
through camera use in order to achieve a free performance and interplay of identities
and ultimately to strengthen social cohesion. Beyond the emancipatory intent, the
diachronic and synchronic case studies are also linked by the fact that most of the
projects were also collaborations with young people, as was the case in the Minor
Media summer camp. In the final section, the author analyses the films made by the
young people in terms of their relation to contemporary popular culture and the performance
of adolescent identities defined by liminality.