Introduction
I. Frames
1. Three Canadian Film Policy Frameworks
Ira Wagman
2. Canadian Cinema and the Intellectual Milieu
Richard Cavell
3. On the Road: Canadian Cinema and the World
Joumane Chahine
4. Landscape as Cinematic Effect
Johanne Sloan
5. Movie Envy: Cinema in the White Cube (Montreal, 1995-2015)
Olivier Asselin
II. Cultures
6. (Re)Claiming Cultural Identity: The NFB's Eskimo Legends and
Inuit Animation from Cape Dorset
Suzanne Buchan
7. Canadian Indigenous Cinema: From Alanis Obomsawin to the
Wapikoni Mobile
Karine Bertrand
8. The Polarities and Hybridities of Arctic Cinemas
Scott MacKenzie and Anna Westerståhl Stenport
9. Diasporic Intimacy: Chinese-Canadian Documentary and the Poetics
of Relation
Lily Cho
10. Canadian Cinema and its Borders
Graciela Martínez-Zalce
III. Cities/Places
11. Regional Scenes and Canadian Screens: Film in Atlantic
Canada
Darrell Varga
12. A Poetics of Discretion
Marion Froger
13. The Emotional Geographies of Quebec Cinema
Daniel Laforest
14. Toronto on Screen
Ian Robinson
IV. Sensibilities
15. Quebec Cinema as Global Cinema
William Marshall
16. Stand Tall: Winnipeg Cinema and the Civic Imaginary
Andrew Burke
17. Still Here, Still Queer? Rethinking Queer Canadian
Cinemas/Canadian Cinemas Queered
Thomas Waugh and Fulvia Massimi with Lisa Aalders
18. Political Modernism, Policy Environments and Digital Daring:
The Changing Politics and Practice of Cine-Feminism in Quebec,
1967-2015
Brenda Longfellow
19. From Expanded to Intimate Cinemas in Canadian Experimental
Film/Video
Monika Kin Gagnon
V. Forms and Genres
20. The Bloody Brood: Canadian Horror Cinema-Past and Present
Scott Preston
21. Popular Quebec Cinema and the Appeal of Folk Homogeneity
André Loiselle
22. The Musicality of Canadian Cinema
Michael Brendan Baker
23. The World Navigate: Interactive Documentaries in Canada
Jessica Mulvogue
24. The Gaming Turn
Bruno Lessard
Janine Marchessault is Professor of Cinema and Media at York
University. She is the author of Ecstatic Worlds: Media, Utopias
and Ecologies (2017); Cosmic Media: Marshall McLuhan (2005); and
(co)editor of numerous collections including 3D Cinema and Beyond
(w/ D. Adler et al 2013); Reimagining Cinema: Film at Expo 67 (w/
M. Gagnon 2014); and Cartographies of Place: Navigating the Urban
(w/ M. Darroch
2014).
Will Straw is James McGill Professor of Urban Media Studies in the
Department of Art History and Communications Studies at McGill
University in Montreal. He is the author of Cyanide and Sin:
Visualizing Crime in 1950s America (2006) and an editor or
co-editor of over 20 volumes of scholarship, including the
Cambridge Companion of Rock and Pop, Circulation and the City,
Formes urbaines, Intersections of Media and Communications:
Concepts and Critical
Frameworks and Accounting for Culture: Thinking through Cultural
Citizenship.
The Oxford Handbook of Canadian Cinema is a welcome addition to the
literature on Canadian cinema and screen practices offering essays
that will work well as course readings but which also offer
insights into emerging areas or turning to areas that have been
previously underexamined (musicality in Canadian cinema
anyone?).
*Liz Czach, British Journal of Canadian Studies*
Ask a Question About this Product More... |