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[ecrea] Special Issue of Journal of Scandinavian Cinema 6.2
Fri Feb 10 22:54:00 GMT 2017
Intellect is thrilled to announce the new issue of /Journal of
Scandinavian Cinema 6.2 /is now available.
For more information about this journal, please click here
<http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-issue,id=3231/> or email
(katy /at/ intellectbooks.com) <mailto:(katy /at/ intellectbooks.com)>
This Special Issue focuses on contemporary Scandinavian documentary
cinema. Guest Editors Ilona Hongisto and Malin Wahlberg present a
collection of contemporary scholarship that illuminates Scandinavian
documentary cinema through meticulous case studies, while also
addressing the broader notions of belonging, identity and, ‘Scandinavia’
in relation to film production, distribution and the politics of media
practice and cultural memory.
Articles in the issue include (partial list):
Can catalogues be dangerous? The anti-catalogue of FilmCentrum
<http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Article,id=23116/>
*Authors: *Stefan Ramstedt
Page Start: 101
This article offers a survey of the film distribution of FilmCentrum
during the first years of the organization. Like the catalogues of other
film cooperatives that were working with distribution, FilmCentrum’s was
open, which meant that the organization accepted all submitted films.
This openness is discussed at length, both in terms of the discourses
around it and the controversies that it aroused, but also as a form of
democratization of the film distribution. The notion of the open
catalogue is also put into the context of a larger counter-cultural
movement and connected to the notion of the anti-catalogue. The film
distribution of FilmCentrum is also placed in the context of the history
of Swedish cinema.
Contemporary experimental feminist Sámi documentary: The first person
politics of Liselotte Wajstedt and Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers
<http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Article,id=23120/>
*Authors: *Scott MacKenzie and Anna Westerståhl Stenport
Page Start: 169
This article examines two experimental documentary feminist Sámi films
by Liselotte Wajstedt and Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers. Their works deploy
experimental techniques such as cell and computer animation, time-lapse
photography and superimposition, along with autobiographical
voice-overs, thereby challenging many dominant tropes of Sámi
filmmaking, including the preponderance of realism and cultural
revivalist narratives. Through ‘first person’ filmmaking, Wajstedt’s
/Sami Daughter Yoik/ (2007) and /Tailfeathers’ Rebel/ (2014) and
/Colonial Gaze Sámi Artists’ Collective/ (co-directed with Nango, 2012)
explore the hybridity of identity, trauma, cultural memory and the
status of documentary films as artistic practice. The films are situated
within larger recent developments in Sámi filmmaking, including
initiatives by the International Sámi Film Institute. This article
reframes the perimeters of both Sámi and Scandinavian documentary
filmmaking in the twenty-first century.
Expanded epistemologies: Animation meets live action in contemporary
Swedish documentary film
<http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Article,id=23122/>
*Authors: *Johnathan Rozenkrantz
Page Start: 189
This short subject studies configurations of animation and live action
in contemporary Swedish documentary film. While digitization has
challenged the indexical image’s verifying function, animation has been
elevated to the level of legitimate document. The epistemological
boundaries of documentary film have consequently been expanded, and now
include the inner worlds of social subjects. In /Gömd (Hidden)/
(Heilborn and Aronowitsch, 2002), animation and live action are
repeatedly juxtaposed in order to visualize a refugee child’s
experienced Otherness. In /Still Born/ (Sandzén, 2014), ultrasound
footage is fused with digital film and animation to manifest the merging
perspectives of a mourning mother and her aborted child.
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