Tuesday, December 18, 2018

Structures of Cinematic Consciousness




New Integral Cinema Project white paper on Structures of Cinematic Consciousness is now available for online viewing and download.

This paper includes a preliminary mapping of how stages of human development and the structures of consciousness that make up each stage are embedded in moving image-based artifacts such as movies, television, online and mobile video, video games, virtual reality, augmented reality and mixed reality mediums. These mappings are based on a meta-analysis of hundreds of moving image artifacts cross-referenced with research on stages of human development, structures of individual and collective human consciousness, human perception, creative expression, and cultural and social anthropology.

This research suggests that human beings project their structures of consciousness into their creative works. This in turn appears to create similar composites of structures of consciousness embedded in these works. In a sense these embedded consciousness structures create a kind of cinematic consciousness that lives within the constructed cinematic reality of these moving images.

Available at: https://www.academia.edu/37998059/Structures_of_Cinematic_Consciousness


Monday, December 17, 2018

"Integral Goes to the Movies" Slideshow



The slide show for the "Integral Goes to the Movies" presentation I gave for Bay Area Integral is now available for viewing and download... Topics include the embedding of structures of consciousness in the moving image; the co-evolution of the moving image, consciousness, culture and society; more fully understanding the power of the medium and how it can be used for transformative and evolutionary purposes; and what is Integral theory and what makes a movie "integral"

 

Sunday, November 18, 2018

Transformative Technology Conference 2018 and the Integral Cinema Project



Following our attendance in the first Transformative Technology Academy this year we attended the Transformative Technology Conference, also put on by Sofia University’s Transformative Technology Lab.

It was a wonderful experience meeting many of our fellow TransTech Academy graduates along with many other TransTech innovators from around the world. So many great speakers and profound and deep conversations with fellow trans-techies exploring the further reaches of how we could use technology for the betterment of humanity and the world we live in.

We would like to thank our conference sponsors Jonathan Steigman and the TEHNC Podcast, Alina Avunjian and AwareNow, and Eugene Pustoshkin and Eros and Kosmos, whose donations covered the costs of us attending the conference.

Thursday, October 18, 2018

The Transformative Technology Academy 2018 and the Integral Cinema Project


This year we were invited to attend the Sofia University Transformative Technology Lab’s first Transformative Technology Academy, a month-long intensive development program to support entrepreneurs and innovators using technology to expand human possibility.

It was an amazing experience, becoming part of a global community dedicated to leveraging technology to expand human possibility through the vectors of mental health, personal growth and development, and individual and collective evolutionary transformation.

We received significant feedback and support on our integral cinema research endeavor, forged beautiful, rich and deep connections with fellow innovators and explorers, and learned so much from my peers and from the program mentors who were all amazing and passionate explorers and supporters of using technology for the betterment of self, other and world.

We were struck by the lack of competitiveness in our community and a spirit of support for each other’s work and passions...and deeply grateful for this opportunity...


Wednesday, August 22, 2018

An Integral Analysis of the New African American Cinema



Introducing a new podcast series exploring the integrative and integral wave we are detecting in a new movement in African American Cinema. This movement, which we are calling the New Black Cinema, consists of a group of subtle and not-so-subtle filmmakers who are taking on the intersection of race, class and social structures as they affect the lived experience of black Americans. These filmmakers are also doing all this in a simple yet complex integrative way that has the potential to actually be able to bypass what sociologist Robin DiAngelo calls "white fragility," the natural resistance of white viewers to deeply examine the entrenched white supremacy woven through every strand of modern America.

The cinematic artists we have identified so far include:

New Black Cinema for White People

With Integral Cinema Project lead research Mark Allan Kaplan and associate researcher Jonathan Steigman. For newbies to integral cinema, we will be introducing some of the basic concepts in this series as we explore these works and artists; and there will be lots of classic and new integral cinema theory and practice being presented here for both beginning and advanced integral cinematic arts students, creators, fans and cinephiles...



View the whole podcast series at: http://bit.ly/2sFDHo4

For background, we highly recommend Robin DiAngelo's mind-blowing book White Fragility for a deep dive into the way white supremacy is encoded into all white Americans from birth.


Sunday, June 10, 2018

Integral Cinematic Arts Journal


Introducing the Integral Cinematic Arts Journal, an online journal exploring integral and evolutionary approaches to the moving image in all its evolving forms.

The journal will feature all the writings on integral cinema by ICP founder Mark Allan Kaplan, Ph.D., along with contributions from ICP research associates and other integral media arts explorers. We are starting with Mark's previously published works first, republished in the order they were created. Once all these have been posted we will be expanding the publication to include others.

The goal of this journal is to provide a central location for all explorations of the integral cinematic arts for free for anyone who has an interest.


Visit the Integral Cinematic Arts Journal at: https://medium.com/integral-cinema

Tuesday, April 3, 2018

Black Panther Marks a Major Integral Cinema Milestone


Marvel's Black Panther is taking the world by storm, raking in over a billion dollars worldwide in its first five weeks of theatrical release, garnering rave reviews from critics and fans, challenging racial and diversity biases and boundaries in Hollywood film culture and beyond, spawning numerous testimonials about the films positive impact on individual viewers and minority communities, and eliciting glowing commentaries on how the film is a milestone in these and other various domains. After analyzing Black Panther and its impact on the individual and the collective, it appears that this wonderful superhero film is a major Integral Cinema milestone as well. 

Black Panther's Integrally-informed cinematic structuring beautifully and subtly mirrors multiple stages of development in all aspects and levels of its narrative, visual, auditory and temporal/editorial expressions. It also shows both healthy and pathological manifestations of each developmental stage and represents subtle ways that one can transcend the pathologies and evolve to higher stages of development. At the same time, the film tackles major psychological, cultural and social issues, from primal psychological wounding to complex issues of race, gender, class, oppression and isolationism, in subtle and deep ways. Most extraordinarily, all of this is elegantly hidden beneath the surface of a wonderful, fun and seemingly-traditional superhero genre piece.

In terms of Black Panther being a milestone in the history of Integral Cinema and the cinema itself, it appears to be groundbreaking in its advanced capacity to integrate and synchronize all dimensions of cinematic expression (Text, Image, Sound and Time) through all levels of storytelling (Textual, Subtextual, Metatextual and Transtextual). While this form of synchronization is at the heart of the cinematic expression tradition, dating back to Sergei Eisenstein in the 1920s and used by many filmmakers since, Integral filmmakers like Ryan Coogler appear to be creating an advanced form that also integrates the different structures of consciousness, culture and society (Archaic, Magic, Mythic, Rational, Pluralistic, Integral). Mr. Coogler's use of this type of cinematic expression in Black Panther is unparalleled in its depth and breadth and the sublime way it hides and integrates its complexity beneath its deceptively simple surface. This approach has the potential to induce subtle yet deeply immersive and transformative experiences in the viewer, transformation that could potentially extend to culture and society as well. This potential is hinted at by the cultural impact the film is already displaying.

From an Integral Cinema perspective, our research suggests that major advances in cinematic expression like those represented by Black Panther affect other creators and their cinematic works. These advances in expression create a major shift in cinematic consciousness, which is the collective way moving images in a given era communicate with the viewer. In turn, these types of advances in cinematic consciousness tend to entrain the audience to perceive in deeper and more expansive ways. In this way the moving image, consciousness, culture and society can be seen to co-evolve.

For more on all of this check out the new Integral Cinema TEHNC podcast series on Black Panther...


3 Keys to Unlock Black Panther (Short introduction to full-length analysis) - This special preview episode introduces you to 3 important keys you can use to unlock the hidden genius of Marvel's blockbuster Black Panther. This 5-minute summation by Integral Cinema Project research associate Jonathan Steigman is a sort of Cliff Notes version to whet your appetite for the full-length examination of the keys and how they manifest in the film with Mark Allan Kaplan, ICP lead researcher and the leading scholar of Integral Cinema.


The Hidden Genius of Black Panther (Full-length analysis) - Mark Allan Kaplan of Integral Cinema Project joins ICP research associate Jonathan Steigman to discuss 3 major keys that can help viewers discover the hidden genius behind the recent Marvel worldwide smash hit, Black Panther. Mark and Jonathan believe the film holds the potential to transform consciousness the world over and they unpack some of its secrets and point to why the film could transform cinematic consciousness as well. Filmmakers and others, take note!

Be sure to also check out Jonathan's short preliminary podcast on The Subversive Brilliance of Black Panther and Mark and Jonathan's short bonus podcast exploring The Previous Films of Black Panther Director Ryan Coogler.