Alphaville: Journal of Film and Screen Media. Issue 10: Women and Media in the Twenty-First Century

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In celebration of its tenth issue, Alphaville is proud to introduce this special issue on Women and Media as a reflection of the journal’s enduring interest in, and desire to contribute to, this dialogue. The range of articles presented in this issue offers an insight into the expanded spectrum of work by and about women in the new millennium, providing a snapshot of the multifaceted ways in which women are working and being represented across the globe. Edited by Abigail Keating and Jill Murphy, University College Cork.

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Now showing 1 - 5 of 16
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    The Lumière Galaxy: Seven Key Words for the Cinema to Come, by Francesco Casetti
    (Film and Screen Media, University College Cork, 2015) Flynn, Niall; Hurley, Marian
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    John Di Stefano: Bandiera Nera, Sydney College of the Arts, Sydney, 23 January–21 February 2015
    (Film and Screen Media, University College Cork, 2015) Wansbrough, Aleksandr Andreas; Odorico, Stefano
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    Pocahontas no more: indigenous women standing up for each other in twenty-first century cinema
    (Film and Screen Media, University College Cork, 2015) Mayer, Sophie
    Sydney Freeland’s fiction feature Drunktown’s Finest (2014) represents the return of Indigenous women’s feature filmmaking after a hiatus caused by neoconservative politics post-9/11. In the two decades since Disney’s Pocahontas (1995), filmmakers such as Valerie Red-Horse have challenged erasure and appropriation, but without coherent distribution or scholarship. Indigenous film festivals and settler state funding have led to a reestablishment, creating a cohort that includes Drunktown’s Finest. Repudiating both the figure of Pocahontas, as analysed by Elise M. Marubbio, and the erasure of Indigenous women in the new Western genre described by Susan Faludi, Drunktown’s Finest relates to both the work of white ally filmmakers of the early 2000s, such as Niki Caro, and to the work of contemporary Indigenous filmmakers working in both features (Marie-Hélène Cousineau and Madeline Ivalu of Arnait) and shorts (Danis Goulet, Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers). Foregrounding female agency, the film is framed by a traditional puberty ceremony that—through the presence of Felixia, a transgender/nádleeh woman—is configured as non-essentialist. The ceremony alters the temporality of the film, and inscribes a powerful new figure for Indigenous futures in the form of a young woman, in line with contemporary Indigenous online activism, and with the historical figure of Pocahontas.