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University of Nebraska Press

Sovereign Screens: Aboriginal Media on the Canadian West Coast

Sovereign Screens: Aboriginal Media on the Canadian West Coast

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While Indigenous media have gained increasing prominence around the world, the vibrant Aboriginal media world on the Canadian West Coast has received little scholarly attention. As the first ethnography of the Aboriginal media community in Vancouver, Sovereign Screens reveals the various social forces shaping Aboriginal media production including community media organizations and avant-garde art centers, as well as the national spaces of cultural policy and media institutions.

Kristin L. Dowell uses the concept of visual sovereignty to examine the practices, forms, and meanings through which Aboriginal filmmakers tell their individual stories and those of their Aboriginal nations and the intertribal urban communities in which they work. She explores the ongoing debates within the community about what constitutes Aboriginal media, how this work intervenes in the national Canadian mediascape, and how filmmakers use technology in a wide range of genres--including experimental media--to recuperate cultural traditions and reimagine Aboriginal kinship and sociality. Analyzing the interactive relations between this social community and the media forms it produces, Sovereign Screens offers new insights into the on-screen and off-screen impacts of Aboriginal media.


Author: Kristin L. Dowell
Publisher: University of Nebraska Press
Published: 12/01/2013
Pages: 296
Binding Type: Hardcover
Weight: 1.30lbs
Size: 9.10h x 5.90w x 1.20d
ISBN: 9780803245389

Review Citation(s):
Chronicle of Higher Education 12/20/2013 pg. 17
Choice 08/01/2014

About the Author
Kristin L. Dowell is an associate professor of anthropology at Florida State University. She is a visual anthropologist who has worked as a film curator at several Native film festivals. Her articles have appeared in the journals American Anthropologist and Transformations and in edited volumes, including Native Art of the Northwest Coast: A History of Changing Ideas, winner of the 2015 Canada Prize in the Humanities.

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