WELCOME TO THE H-FILM NETWORK!PLEASE READ AND SAVE THIS MESSAGE.

This welcome message is designed to provide you with basic information about this network. It contains information on using the list (managing your subscription; tips on contacting and communicating via the list; mailing addresses of the list editors; a list of the current editorial board); rules for posting (style, editorial practice); information about the network's associated service on the World Wide Web; and contact information about the network's parent, H-Net.

I. The H-FILM Network: Scope, Content, Purpose.

Welcome to H-Film, an international electronic discussion group with over 1000 subscribers, including many prominent scholars in the fields of film history, mass communication, and popular culture. Its key mission is to promote conversation among humanists and to educate them in the use of electronic media.

Electronic discussion groups vary widely in quality. Many are unmoderated and most consist of simple, relatively trivial queries and responses. As moderators, we seek to limit the trivial and extraneous and to focus conversation so that H-Film can offer you more. It can:

--promote teaching by facilitating the exchange of course syllabi, bibliographies, and other teaching resources;
--disseminate information on grants, conferences, jobs, new books, articles, and videos;
--provide reports on new software, CD-ROMs, and on-line research tools;
--and, above all, offer the kinds of scholarly interchange that up until now was largely confined to professional conferences or small circles of friends.

We hope that over time H-Film will develop close linkages with major journals and professional associations in the field. What H-Film can offer these institutions is a way of instantly communicating important professional information to a large audience at absolutely no cost. If you have any suggestions about ways that H-Film can forge ties with the professional associations and journals, we would greatly appreciate hearing them.

II. Editors.

The H-FILM list is co-edited by:

Patricia Aufderheide , <paufder@american.edu>, is Professor of Communication at American University, and a senior editor of In These Times newspaper. She is the author of Communications Policy in the Public Interest: The Telecommunications Act of 1996 (Guilford Press) and of Collected Essays (University of Minnesota Press), and the editor of Beyond PC: Toward a Politics of Understanding (Graywolf Press). She has been a Fulbright and John Simon Guggenheim fellow, has served as a juror at the Sundance Film Festival among others. Aufderheide is a prolific cultural journalist, policy analyst, and editor on media and society for publications including The Washington Post, Harper's and The Independent, and has received numerous journalism and scholarly awards. She has advocated universal service telephone policies for the United Church of Christ, and has consulted on media issues for Benton, Rockefeller, Ford and MacArthur Foundations, as well as a variety of public television organizations. Aufderheide currently serves on the film advisory board of the National Gallery of Art, and on the editorial boards of a variety of publications, including Communication Law and Policy. She received her Ph.D. in history from the University of Minnesota.

Steven Mintz , <smintz@uh.edu>, is John and Rebecca Moores Professor of History and Senior Associate Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences at the University of Houston. His books include Domestic Revolutions: A Social History of American Family Life, Hollywood's America: U.S. History Through Film, America and its Peoples, and The Boisterous Sea of Liberty. He is H-Net's Vice President for Teaching.

Rebecca Bell-Metereau, <mbeky@yahoo.com>, a leading authority on gender studies, multicultural studies, rhetoric, and popular culture, is professor of English at Southwest Texas State University and the author of Hollywood Androgyny and Simone Weil: On Politics, Religion, and Society. She received her B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. degrees from Indiana University and teaches courses in video protection, novel into film, technology and gender in media, modern drama, and film and prose fiction.

Ken Nolley, <knolley@willamette.edu>, a leading authority on documentary film, is Professor of English at Willamette Univeristy in Salem, Oregon, where he has taught since 1967. During that time he has served as department chair, as associate dean and as acting dean of the College of Liberal Arts. He has also established a small film studies program within the English department. He grew up in Montana and graduated from Westmont College. He earned his M.A. in Americal literature from the University of Virginia and his Ph.D. in 19th century literature from the University of Oregon. He has written mainly on the works of John Ford and Peter Watkins. He is the editor of Peter Watkins' The Journey: A Film in the Global Interest, and has served as chair of the editorial board of the Willamette Journal of the Liberal Arts.

Darryl Wiggers, <Darryl.Wiggers@AllianceAtlantis.com>, joined the the programming department at Showcase Television in 1996, and History Television in 1997. As a member of the newly merged Alliance Atlantis Broadcasting he is currently assisting in the programming of multiple digital channels launching in the fall of 2001, including BBC Canada. Born and raised in Whitby, Ontario, he graduated from York University in 1988 with a B.F.A. in Film Theory and Screenwriting. He subsequently operated his own video production business and worked as freelance journalist for The Globe and Mail's Broadcast Week. He also helped to found the Italian Film Society of Canada, primarily volunteering his services as a programmer.

The editors serve two-year renewable terms, with the approval of the H-Net Executive Committee and rotate their duties. The current editor will be identified in all messages coming from the list. The editors will solicit postings (by email, phone and even by regular mail), will assist people in managing subscriptions and setting up options, will handle routine inquiries, and will consolidate some postings. Anyone with suggestions about what H-FILM can and might do is invited to send in ideas. The editors will solicit and post newsletter-type information (calls for conferences, for example, or listings of sessions at conventions.) Like all H-Net lists, H-FILM is moderated to edit out material that, in the editors' opinion, is not germane to the list, involves technical matters (such as subscription management requests), is inflammatory, or violates evolving, yet common, standards of Internet etiquette. Please read section III below for details about ownership, style, formatting, and content of your messages. H-Net's procedure for resolving disputes over list editorial practices is Article II, Section 2.20 of our bylaws, located at:

http://www.h-net.org/about/by-laws.html

III. Communicating Through the List.

A. Copyright notice. PLEASE READ CAREFULLY. H-Net considers all messages posted to its lists to be a form of publication. All contributions to H-FILM fall under Art. II, Sec. 2.04 of the H-Net Bylaws concerning copyright and intellectual property:

"Although authors of messages to H-Net lists retain the copyright in those messages, sending a message to an H-Net list for posting will constitute permission to H-Net and its subscribers for electronic distribution and downloading for nonprofit educational purposes with proper attribution to the author, the originating list, and the date of original posting. Original messages to H-Net lists are not in the public domain, and may not be used for other than educational, nonprofit purposes without the permission of the copyright holder and notification to H-Net." In general, the author retains copyright rights to publication of any submission to the list, and grants to H-FILM and H-Net permission to store, disseminate with full attribution, and make available to subscribers such submissions without further permission. Postings (such as H-Net reviews) that are commissioned by H-Net are copyrighted by H-Net and may be reprinted for nonprofit, educational purposes with proper attribution to the author, location, and H-Net. A full copy of the H-Net Constitution and Bylaws and other important information may be found on the World Wide Web at: http://www.h-net.org/about/.

B. Contributions: "Netiquette." The tone and content of H-FILM depend directly on subscribers. The editors want to encourage lively, informal, productive discussion and exchange of information. To that end, we ask that contributions be considerate of the needs of a busy audience of scholars, many of whom must pay for their access to the internet. A number of excellent guides to online behavior and style are available on the World Wide Web; we invite you consult them.

-- ALL MAIL TO THE LIST MUST BE SIGNED. The editors will delay posting until authorship and email address are confirmed.

-- CONTENT: Editors retain the right to review material for its pertinence, tone, style, and relevance to the list's mission. Ad hominems, unattributed quotations or innuendo, private messages forwarded for posting without permission, or messages that violate the norms of civility and professional courtesy will be rejected. Persistent violators can be removed from the subscription list.

-- STYLE: the default editorial style for the list is that of a letter to the editor. Your remarks can be crafted to suit the tone of an existing discussion thread, but in any case they should address the editor and not make direct personal references to others, except where you are replying directly to a simple query (e.g., "you can find this information in Webster's Third International Dictionary."). Avoid excessive quotation of messages you refer or reply to.

-- FORMAT: Please send messages in plain text: no styles, html, special fonts, graphics files, or nonstandard characters (except diacriticals, which are acceptable). Signature files are subject to editing for content and length. Advertisements in signatures will be removed. Remove or turn off .vcf, digital signatures, or other automatic attachments. As a rule, editors do not redistribute attachments to the list; consider posting the material at a web site, or consult with the editor concerning proper venues for publication.

IV. Technical Information.

When you subscribe, LISTSERV will send you a confirmation message containing important information about managing your subscription. Please save this message as a text file for future reference. ALL changes to your subscription must be addressed to listserv@h-net.msu.edu, the software that manages the distribution and archiving of list electronic mail.

For online help with your subscription, visit: http://www.h-net.org/lists/help/ email: help@mail.h-net.msu.edu

1.) To subscribe: Normally, receiving this message from listserv indicates that you are already subscribed to the list. But should you need to resubscribe, send the following command (turn off signatures, styles/fonts, and word wrap if you expect the line to wrap), as an email message to listserv@h-net.msu.edu:

sub H-FILM your name, institution
Example: sub H-FILM Jane Smith, Illinois State U.

Follow the instructions in the reply that LISTSERV will send you in response to this command.

2.) To unsubscribe, logon to the computer account from which you subscribed to the list, and send this message to listserv@h-net.msu.edu:

SIGNOFF H-FILM

Please unsubscribe from H-FILM and all other mailing lists if you are terminating a particular computer account. You can then resubscribe from the new account.

3.) To change your subscription address: if you have access to your old account, login to it and send the command:

CHANGE listname newaddress
E.g., CHANGE H-FILM jsmith@ilstate.edu

You then must login to the NEW account to confirm the change, or it will not be executed. If you do not have access to your old account, then write to the list address and have an editor make the change for you; be sure to provide your old and new addresses.

4.) To send your own message to all subscribers, send an email note directly to H-FILM@h-net.msu.edu. Please see III above on style and formatting of messages to the list.

5.) To REPLY to a message so that all subscribers can read it, be sure that the outgoing reply is directed to H-FILM@h-net.msu.edu, and not to the original author or to the editor. Replies intended only for individual authors should be sent directly to the author.

6.) If you are away for an extended period, suspend H-FILM email by sending this to listserv@h-net.msu.edu:

SET H-FILM NOMAIL

7.) After vacation, you can resume by sending to listserv@h-net.msu.edu:

SET H-FILM MAIL

8.) If you prefer to receive one daily digest of all posts to H-FILM instead of various individual posts, you can do so by sending this to listserv@h-net.msu.edu:

SET H-FILM DIGEST

To return to individual messages, send the following message:

SET H-FILM NODIGEST

V. The H-FILM Site on the World Wide Web

In addition to providing interactive communications via electronic mail, H-FILM also maintains a site on the World Wide Web. The site is located on the H-Net server at Michigan State University in East Lansing, Michigan, USA. It may be located by following the hypertext links at http://www.h-net.org.The H-FILM web site contains the following information and services:

- The archives of the H-FILM list, known as its "logs." They are in searchable and sortable format.
- The network's official documents: its welcome files, lists of board members and editors, contact information, and other founding and information documents.
- Hypertext links to resources in our subject: teaching materials, research archives, other lists.

V. Advisory Board.

H-FILM's daily activities are managed by the editors. Its long-term policies are developed by the advisory board. If you are interested in serving on the board, please contact the current editor. Board members referee incoming articles, reviews, and teaching materials; establish basic subscription restrictions and policy; advise the editors on disputes among editors and subscribers; monitor the list and make active contributions to discussion; and serve as the subscribers' voice in H-Net affairs. You are encouraged to contact any or all of the editorial board members with ideas and concerns about H-FILM.

VI. Our Parent Organization: H-Net

H-Net is an international consortium of scholars in the humanities and social sciences that creates and coordinates electronic networks, using a variety of media, and with a common objective of advancing humanities and social science teaching and research. H-Net was created to provide a positive, supportive, equalitarian environment for the friendly exchange of ideas and scholarly resources.

The goals of H-NET networks are to enable scholars to easily communicate current research and teaching interests; to discuss new approaches, methods and tools of analysis; to share information on electronic databases; and to test new ideas and share comments on the literature in their fields.

H-Net's Constitution and Bylaws, along with a list of its officers and committees, is available at:
http://www.h-net.org/about/

Among H-Net's many services are:

- Book and software reviews: timely, exhaustive, authoritative, professional, fast. Mailed through our lists and stored in searchable, printable, retrievable format on our site at the World Wide Web. http://www.h-net.org/reviews

- Job guide postings: at regular intervals, H-Net offers employment information in a broad array of fields in the humanities and social sciences. http://www.matrix.msu.edu/jobs

- H-Net calendar: announcements of conferences, papers, and professional activities, archived and searchable at our web site. You can visit our site and sample these and other services, at: http://www.h-net.org/announce

CONTACTING H-NET FOR MORE INFORMATION

On the World Wide Web: http://www.h-net.org Electronic mail: H-NET@H-NET.msu.edu

Postal mail:

H-Net
8A Morill Hall
Michigan State University
East Lansing, MI, 48824-1046
Phone: (517)432-5134
Fax: (517)353-5229

Executive Director: Prof. Peter Knupfer
Michigan State University
E-Mail: peter@mail.h-net.msu.edu

Associate Director: Heather Hawley
Michigan State University
E-Mail: hawley@mail.h-net.msu.edu