Biographie de l'auteur :
Jonathan Murray is Lecturer in Film and Visual Culture at Edinburgh College of Art. He is the author of That Thinking Feeling: A Research Guide to Scottish Cinema, 1938 - 2004 (Edinburgh College of Art/Scottish Screen, 2005), Discomfort and Joy: the Cinema of Bill Forsyth (Peter Lang, forthcoming), The New Scottish Cinema (I. B. Tauris, forthcoming) and the co-editor of Constructing The Wicker Man: Film and Cultural Studies Perspectives (University of Glasgow Crichton Publications, 2005) and The Quest for The Wicker Man: History, folklore and Pagan perspectives (Luath Press, 2006). Fidelma Farley has held posts in the Film Studies Departments at University College Dublin, the University of Aberdeen and the National University of Ireland, Galway. She has written about Irish cinema, with a particular focus on gender and post-colonialism, including This Other Eden (Cork University Press, 2001), Anne Devlin (Flicks Books, 2000) and, most recently, articles on Irish and Scottish cinema, and Irish-language cinema. Rod Stoneman is the Director of the Huston School of Film & Digital Media at the National University of Ireland, Galway. He was Chief Executive of Bord Scannan na hEireann/the Irish Film Board until September 2003 and previously a Deputy Commissioning Editor in the Independent Film and Video Department at Channel 4 Television. He has made a number of documentaries including Ireland: The Silent Voices (1983), Italy: the Image Business (1984) and 12,000 Years of Blindness (2007) and written extensively on film and television. His most recent book, Chavez: The Revolution Will Not Be Televised, was published by Wallflower Press in 2008.
Présentation de l'éditeur :
Cinema from Scotland has attained an unprecedented international profile in the decade or so since 'Shallow Grave' (1995) and 'Trainspotting'; (1996) impinged on the consciousness of audiences and critics around the world. 'Scottish Cinema Now' is the first collection of essays to examine in-depth the new films and filmmakers that have emerged from Scotland over the last ten years. With contributions from both established names and new voices in British Cinema Studies, the volume combines detailed textual analysis with discussion of industrial issues, scholarship on new movies with historical investigation of unjustly forgotten figures and film from Scotland's cinematic past, and a focus on international as well as indigenous images of Scottishness. Responding to the ways in recent Scottish filmmaking has transformed the country's cinematic landscape, 'Scottish Cinema Now' reexamines established critical agendas and sets new ones for the study of Scotland's relationship with the moving image in the twenty-first century.
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