Talk:Angela Dalle Vacche

Angela Dalle Vacche
Angela Dalle Vacche is a specialist in the intersection of aesthetic theory and European film history. Her work deals with the representation of history on screen, the relation between film and the arts, and the paradigm of art, science, religion in film theory. Dalle Vacche has taught at Vassar College, Yale University, Emory University, and the Georgia Institute of Technology where she is professor emerita. Born and educated in Venice, Italy, she came to the United States in 1978 to acquire a M.A. degree in American Studies (1980) from Mount Holyoke College and a Ph.D in Film Studies (1985) from the University of Iowa.

Dalle Vacche has been the recipient of grants, fellowships, professorships and awards: Fulbright Travel Grant, Yale Morse Fellowship; Yale Mellon Fellowship; Bellagio Rockefeller Grant, Leverhulme Distinguished Professorship at Birkbeck College, University of London; Dora Maar House Fellowship; Camargo Foundation Fellowship; Distinguished Senior Goggio Professorship from the University of Toronto; Senior Professorship from IMT School, Lucca, Italy. Dalle Vacche's film retrospective Italian Silent Divas (2000) at the Film Society of Lincoln Center, New York City, was voted "Best Event of The Year" by the magazine Art Forum, while her book Diva was the recipient of the American Association of University Libraries Award.

Bibliography:

Books: The Body in The Mirror: Shapes of History in Italian Cinema, Princeton 1991, Legacy Series.

Cinema and Painting: How Art is Used in Film, Texas 1996, multiple editions.

Diva: Defiance and Passion in Early Italian Cinema, Texas 2008.

Andre Bazin's Film Theory: Art, Science, Religion, Oxford 2019.

Anthologies: The Visual Turn: Film Theory and Art History, Rutgers 2004.

Color: The Film Reader, co-edited with Brian Price, Routledge 2006.

Film, Art, New Media: Museum without Walls, Palgrave 2012.

AlpediSiusi (talk) 22:39, 28 October 2023 (UTC)

Reply 30-OCT-2023

 * Your edit request could not be reviewed because the claims made do not contain ref tags. When proposing edit requests, it is important to highlight in the text, through the use of ref tags, which specific sources are doing the referencing for each claim. The point of these ref tags is to allow the reviewer and readers to check that the material is sourced; that point will be lost if the references are not clearly placed. In the collapsed section below titled Request edit examples, I have illustrated two: The first shows how the edit request was submitted; the second shows how requests should be submitted in the future.

REF TAGS OMITTED ↓ The Sun's diameter is 864,337 miles, while the Moon's diameter is 2,159 miles. The Sun's temperature is 5,778 Kelvin.

References

^ Sjöblad, Tristan. The Sun. Academic Press, 2020, p. 1. ^ Harinath, Prisha. (2020). "Size of the Moon", Science, 51(78):46. ^ Uemura, Shū. The Sun's Heat. Academic Press, 2020, p. 2. 

In the example above there are three references provided for the stated claims. But the text does not indicate, through the use of ref tags, which reference applies to which claim. Your edit request similarly does not provide ref tags indicating which source goes where. The links between material and their source references must be clearly made, as shown in the next example below:

REF TAGS INCLUDED ↓ The Sun's diameter is 864,337 miles,[1] while the Moon's diameter is 2,159 miles.[2] The Sun's temperature is 5,778 Kelvin.[3]

References

^ Sjöblad, Tristan. The Sun. Academic Press, 2020, p. 1. ^ Harinath, Prisha. (2020). "Size of the Moon", Science, 51(78):46. <li id="noteFoot03a" >^ Uemura, Shū. The Sun's Heat. Academic Press, 2020, p. 2.</li> </ol> In the example above the links between the provided references and their claim statements are perfectly clear.


 * Kindly reformulate your edit request so that it aligns more with the second example above, and feel free to re-submit that edit request below this reply post at your earliest convenience. Regards, Spintendo  14:58, 30 October 2023 (UTC)