What do digital platforms mean for cinema studies in Canada? In an era when digital media are proliferating and thousands upon thousands of clips are available online, it seems counter-intuitive to say that audio-visual history is quickly disappearing. But the two processes are actually happening in tandem.
Adopting a media-archaeological approach to the history of cinema, contributors to Cinephemera cover a wide range of pressing issues relating to Canadian cinema's ephemerality, including neglected or overlooked histories, the work of found footage filmmakers, questions about access and copyright, and practices of film archiving. Spurred by rapid changes to technologies of production, viewing, and preservation, this collection showcases both leading and emerging scholars grappling with the shifting meaning of cinema as an object of study. Film historians are put in conversation with experimental filmmakers and archivists to provide renewed energy for cinema studies by highlighting common interests around the materiality and circulation of films, videos, and other old media.
Considering a wide range of cases from the earliest days of silent film production to the most recent initiatives in preservation, Cinephemera exposes the richness of moving image production in Canada outside the genres of feature length narrative fiction and documentary - a history that is at risk of being lost just as it is appearing.
Contributors include Andrew Burke (Winnipeg), Jason Crawford (Champlain), Liz Czach (Alberta), Seth Feldman (York), Monika Kin Gagnon (Concordia), André Habib (Montreal), Randolph Jordan (SFU), Peter Lester (Brock), Scott Mackenzie (Queen's); Louis Pelletier (Montreal), Katherine Quanz (WLU), Micky Story (New College), Charles Tepperman (Calgary), Jennifer VanderBurgh (Saint Mary's), William C. Wees (McGill), Jerry White (Dalhousie), and Christine York (Concordia).

eBook - ePub
Cinephemera
Archives, Ephemeral Cinema, and New Screen Histories in Canada
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
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Table of contents
- Cover
- Half title
- Title
- Copyright
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Canadian Cinema, Ephemeral Cinema
- 1 Early Quebec Actualities and the Ephemeral Meaning of Moving Images in the Transitional Era
- 2 Canada’s Lost Frontier Epic: The Stillborn Saga of Policing the Plains
- 3 Uncovering Canada’s Amateur Film Tradition: Leslie Thatcher’s Films and Contexts
- 4 “Mental Prophylaxis”: Crawley Films, McGraw-Hill Educational Films, and Orphan Cinema
- 5 A Thrill Every Minute!”: Travel-Adventure Film Lectures in the Post-War Era
- 6 “Versions, Revisions, and Adaptations”: Film Production in Two Languages at the National Film Board
- 7 Breaking New Ground: Canada’s First Found-Footage Films
- 8 Unfinished Films and Posthumous Cinema: Charles Gagnon’s R69 and Joyce Wieland’s Wendy and Joyce
- 9 Tiger Child: IMAX and Donald Brittain Times Nine
- 10 Ephemeral Godard: Video, History, and Quebec
- 11 Out Here: Feeling Bad, Feeling Gay in Michel Audy’s Luc ou la part des choses and Crever à vingt ans
- 12 Against Ephemerality: The CBC’s Archival Turn, 1989–96
- 13 Seeing Then, Hearing Now: Audiovisual Counterpoint at the Intersection of Dual Production Contexts in Larry Kent’s Hastings Street
- 14 Preserving Ephemeral Aboriginal Films and Videos: The Archival Practices of Vtape and ISUMATV
- 15 Preserving/Burning: Karl Lemieux’s Film Performances
- 16 Films Collecting Dust and Dusty Film Collages: Ephemerality at Work
- 17 Sampling Heritage: The NFB’s Digital Archive
- 18 Memory, Magnetic Tape, and Death by Popcorn: The Tragedy of the Winnipeg Jets
- Illustrations
- Bibliography
- Contributors
- Index
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Yes, you can access Cinephemera by Zoë Druick,Gerda Cammaer in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Social Sciences & Film History & Criticism. We have over 1.5 million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.