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Politics, Culture and Experimental Film in the 1970s
Other Cinemas
Politics, Culture and Experimental Film in the 1970s
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Description
The 1970s was an enormously creative period for experimental film. Its innovations and debates have had far-reaching and long-lasting influence, with a resurgence of interest in the decade revealed by new gallery events, film screenings and social networks that recognise its achievements. Professor Laura Mulvey, and writer/director Sue Clayton, bring together journalists and scholars at the cutting edge of research into 1970s radical cinema for this collection. Chapters are at once historically grounded yet fused with the current analysis of today's generation of cine-philes, to rediscover a unique moment for extraordinary film production. Other Cinemas establishes the factors that helped to shape alternative film: world cinema and internationalism, the politics of cultural policy and arts funding, new accessible technologies, avant-garde theories, and the development of a dynamic and interactive relationship between film and its audiences. Exploring and celebrating the work of The Other Cinema, the London Film-makers' Co-op and other cornerstones of today's film culture, as well as the impact of creatives such as William Raban and Stephen Dwoskin - and Mulvey and Clayton themselves - this important book takes account of a wave of socially aware film practice without which today's activist, queer, minority and feminist voices would have struggled to gather such volume.
Table of Contents
Sue Clayton and Laura Mulvey
Part 1
Critical contexts for 1970s experimental filmmaking
Chapter 1
Sophie Mayer: Feminism and psychoanalytic theory
Chapter 2
Nicolas Helm-Grovas: Screen theory
Chapter 3
Politics and documentary practices
Chapter 4
Colin Perry: Brecht and theories of history
Part 2
Infrastructures, technologies and 1970s experimental filmmaking
Chapter 5
Ed Web Ingall: The technologies and practices of community video
Chapter 6
Julia Knight: From the LFMC to the Lux: DIY distribution networks
Chapter 7
Kim Knowles: The significance of 16mm film stock
Chapter 8
Lucy Reynolds: The origins and practice of women's distribution: from Circles to Cine-nova
Part 3
Practices, aesthetics and 1970s experimental filmmaking (The 200 avant-gardes)
Chapter 9
Catherine Elwes: Avant-garde video and experimental television
Chapter 10
Steven McIntyre: Structural materialism at the London Film-makers Co-op
Chapter 11
Patti Gaal-Holmes: Women's voices
Chapter 12
Daniela Rose King: The black workshops and collective practice
Part 4
Case Studies
Chapter 13
Amy Tobin: Rapunzel, Let Down Your Hair (1978)
Chapter 14
Kodwo Eshun: The Song of the Shirt (1979)
Chapter 15
Frederico Windhausen: River Yar (1972)
Chapter 16
Rachel Garfield: Behindert (1974)
Chapter 17
Jamie Chambers: the Amber Film Collective
Postscript
Sue Clayton and Laura Mulvey
Product details
| Published | 30 Jun 2017 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (Epub & Mobi) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Extent | 368 |
| ISBN | 9781786722041 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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An invaluable reference source for academics, researchers and the wider public less familiar with this significant period of British film history.
William Raban, University of the Arts London, UK
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This anthology brilliantly reflects the struggles and achievements of a generation of filmmakers and film scholars outside Britain's commercial entertainment industry. Edited by two key figures from the movement and introducing texts by leading contemporary scholars on this period, this book offers new insights into a vibrant, influential and often highly contested film culture.
David Curtis, BAFVSC, Central Saint Martins, UK
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This superb collection of essays presents a very timely reconsideration of many key independent and radical films of the 1970s, their context of production and exhibition then, and their continuing importance for the aesthetics and politics of image-making in our current era of the digital and global.
Elizabeth Cowie, University of Kent, UK
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This book is distinctive in the way it gathers different threads and focuses on actual films and exhibition practices while at the same maintaining an approach that privileges critical theory. It also benefits from the editorial policy of commissioning partly from people who, like the editors, participated in the 1970s movement and partly from much younger authors.
The Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television
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As befits its subject, the loose network of film and video collectives which bloomed in the wake of 1968, this edited collection offers a variety of angles whose effect is cumulative. The 'other cinemas' of the title ranged from the agit-prop Cinema Action to Black Audio Film Collective; from Laura Mulvey and Peter Wollen, closely associated with Screen, house journal of cine-structuralism, to the 'structural/materialist' London Film-Makers' Co-op, whose members at their most extreme rejected all forms of representation; and from the feminist Circles screening collective to the 'subjective documentarist' Stephen Dwoskin.
Sight & Sound
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