Multitask Variational Autoencoding of Human-to-Human Object Handover

Author(s):  
Haziq Razali ◽  
Yiannis Demiris
Keyword(s):  
2020 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Valerio Ortenzi ◽  
Francesca Cini ◽  
Tommaso Pardi ◽  
Naresh Marturi ◽  
Rustam Stolkin ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2014 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 653-666 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jacopo Aleotti ◽  
Vincenzo Micelli ◽  
Stefano Caselli
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Elena Corina Grigore ◽  
Kerstin Eder ◽  
Anthony G. Pipe ◽  
Chris Melhuish ◽  
Ute Leonards

2018 ◽  
Vol 34 (3) ◽  
pp. 660-673 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sina Parastegari ◽  
Ehsan Noohi ◽  
Bahareh Abbasi ◽  
Milos Zefran

2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 21-51
Author(s):  
Debashree Mukherjee

In 1939, at the height of her stardom, the actress Shanta Apte went on a spectacular hunger strike in protest against her employers at Prabhat Studios in Poona, India. The following year, Apte wrote a harsh polemic against the extractive nature of the film industry. In Jaau Mi Cinemaat? (Should I Join the Movies?, 1940), she highlighted the durational depletion of the human body that is specific to acting work. This article interrogates these two unprecedented cultural events—a strike and a book—opening them up toward a history of embodiment as production experience. It embeds Apte's emphasis on exhaustion within contemporaneous debates on female stardom, industrial fatigue, and the status of cinema as work. Reading Apte's remarkable activism as theory from the South helps us rethink the meanings of embodiment, labor, materiality, inequality, resistance, and human-object relations in cinema.


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