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[ecrea] DWC Announcement - New Title from St Andrews Film Studies -   Film Festival Year Book 2
Mon Feb 15 16:28:07 GMT 2010
*/Film Festival Yearbook 2: Film Festivals and Imagined Communities/*
Edited by Dina Iordanova with Ruby Cheung
St Andrews Film Studies, 2010
ISBN: 978-0-9563730-1-4 (paperback)
Price: £17.99 (UK), $29.00 (US)
http://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/filmbooks
Film Festivals are usually associated with big 
cities? most glamorous sites where celebrities 
showcase designer-branded outfits on miles of 
red carpet, all lit up by press flashlights. But 
how about the other film festivals, those 
organised by minority groups for minority 
audiences? How about the festivals that do not 
trade in glamour but focus on a variety of 
political and social agendas instead? There are 
the UK?s largest African film festival held 
annually in Edinburgh, the Migrant Worker Film 
Festival in South Korea, or the festivals set up 
by ethnic minority or human rights activists to 
cater to displaced populations in the Sahara or 
promote stateless Kurdish culture in the 
diaspora, as well as grand showcases staged by 
wealthy industrialised nations in extension of 
their cultural diplomacy efforts. These film 
festivals may be far from the limelight, yet in 
creating live encounters they bring together a 
host of imagined communities and are of at least 
equal importance in regard to our understanding 
of the dynamics in the global circulation of cinema.
*/Film Festivals and Imagined Communities/* 
(2010), the second volume of the */Film Festival 
Yearbook/* from St Andrews Film Studies, comes 
timely to shed light on these issues. This 
latest volume brings together essays about 
festivals that use international cinema to 
facilitate transnationally ?imagined 
communities? for diverse socio-cultural-ethnic 
interactions in a vast range of places, from 
Vienna, San Francisco, and Havana to Seoul, 
Bradford, and Dakhla. The ?Contexts? section 
includes texts highlighting aspects of festival 
organisation, cultural policies, and funding 
models, as well as analysing programming 
practices related to these often highly politicised events.
The diverse range of contributors and 
contributions to the volume reflect the series? 
transnational focus. Authors include Ruby 
Cheung, Lindiwe Dovey, Michael Guillén, Yun Mi 
Hwang, Dina Iordanova, Miriam Ross, Isabel 
Santaolalla and Stefan Simanowitz, Mustafa 
Gündog(du, Jérôme Segal, and Roy Stafford. The 
book features the 2009 update of the film 
festival research bibliography by Skadi Loist 
and Marijke de Valck, and an extensive 
thematically-organised listing of a variety of transnational festivals.
?The very ambitious aspiration of the/ Film 
Festival Yearbook/ is, quite literally, to define a new area of film study.?
 Jonathan Rosenbaum (www.jonathanrosenbaum.com)
?/Film Festivals and Imagined Communities/  the 
second volume in the series  opens up new 
horizons both for those who study media and 
those who create the significant but often 
overlooked ?media worlds? where films first get 
launched: film festivals from the ?periphery?.?
 Faye Ginsburg (Director, Center for Media, 
Culture and History, New York University)
Review copies of */Film Festival Yearbook 2: 
Film Festivals and Imagined Communities/* will 
be sent to various internationally renowned 
journals with global circulation, including 
/Cineaste/,/ Screen/,/ Film Comment/,/ Film 
Quarterly/, /Historical Journal of Film, Radio 
and Television/,/ Journal of Popular Film and 
TV/, /Film Criticism/,/ Canadian Journal of Film 
Studies/,/ Senses of Cinema/,/ Positif/, and more.
*
About the editors:*
Dina Iordanova has built an academic career as a 
specialist on the cinema of Eastern Europe and 
the Balkans. Her more recent work is focused on 
business models and distribution patterns within 
the international film industries. She is 
Director of the Centre for Film Studies at the 
University of St Andrews in Scotland, where she 
leads The Leverhulme Trust-funded project 
?Dynamics of World Cinema? 
(www.st-andrews.ac.uk/worldcinema). She is also 
the publisher of the /Film Festival Yearbook/ 
(FFY) series and writes DinaView.com. Her most 
recent work appears in /Cinema at the Periphery/ 
(2010) and /Moving People, Moving Images: Cinema 
and Trafficking in the New Europe/ (2010).
Ruby Cheung is The Leverhulme Trust Research 
Associate at the Centre for Film Studies at the 
University of St Andrews, Scotland, where she 
works with the ?Dynamics of World Cinema? team. 
Her research interests include East Asian 
cinemas, Asian film industries, diasporic film 
distribution, regional and national film policy, 
Chinese diasporic on-line fandom and issues of 
film promotion. She is the editor of /Cinemas, 
Identities and Beyond/ (Cambridge Scholars 
Publishing, 2009). Her latest work includes 
investigations into diasporic on-line fandom of 
epic cinema as well as an anthology on Asian film festivals.
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