Arctic Cinemas and the Documentary Ethos
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Arctic Cinemas and the Documentary Ethos

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ISBN-13:
9780253040312
Veröffentl:
2019
Einband:
WEB PDF
Seiten:
384
Autor:
Lilya Kaganovsky
eBook Typ:
PDF
eBook Format:
Reflowable WEB PDF
Kopierschutz:
Adobe DRM [Hard-DRM]
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

1. This is the first book to explore the history of the creation of documentary cinema in and about the global Arctic region from Nanook of the North to the present day. It addresses key issues facing the study of Arctic documentary moving images, both those made in the Global North and those that, for various reasons, appropriate the North for their own aesthetic, cultural, or political ends.

2. Lilya Kaganovsky is a returning IU Press authors whose previous edited collection has won major awards. Scott Mackenzie and Anna Westerståhl Stenport are experts on Arctic cinemas who have also published widely.

3. IU Press publishes the main textbook in documentary film studies by Bill Nichols. This title is the first in the pipeline of a group of titles that will build up IUP's documentary studies offerings with cutting edge monographs and edited collections.

Beginning with Robert Flaherty's Nanook of the North (1922), the majority of films that have been made in, about, and by filmmakers from the Arctic region have been documentary cinema. Focused on a hostile environment that few people visit, these documentaries have heavily shaped ideas about the contemporary global Far North. In Arctic Cinemas and the Documentary Ethos, contributors from a variety of scholarly and artistic backgrounds come together to provide a comprehensive study of Arctic documentary cinemas from a transnational perspective. This book offers a thorough analysis of the concept of the Arctic as it is represented in documentary filmmaking, while challenging the notion of "The Arctic" as a homogenous entity that obscures the environmental, historical, geographic, political, and cultural differences that characterize the region. By examining how the Arctic is imagined, understood, and appropriated in documentary work, the contributors argue that such films are key in contextualizing environmental, indigenous, political, cultural, sociological, and ethnographic understandings of the Arctic, from early cinema to the present. Understanding the role of these films becomes all the more urgent in the present day, as conversations around resource extraction, climate change, and sovereignty take center stage in the Arctic's representation.

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