Cinema of Pain -

Cinema of Pain

On Quebec's Nostalgic Screen

Liz Czach, André Loiselle (Herausgeber)

Buch | Softcover
259 Seiten
2020
Wilfrid Laurier University Press (Verlag)
978-1-77112-433-1 (ISBN)
48,55 inkl. MwSt
Since the defeat of the pro-sovereigntists in 1995, the loss of a cohesive nationalistic vision in the province has led many Québécois to use their ancestral origins to inject meaning into their lives. This book argues that this phenomenon is observable in a pervasive sense of nostalgia in Quebec culture and especially in the province's cinema.
Since the defeat of the pro-sovereigntists in the 1995 Quebec referendum, the loss of a cohesive nationalistic vision in the province has led many Québécois to use their ancestral origins to inject meaning into their everyday lives. A Cinema of Pain argues that this phenomenon is observable in a pervasive sense of nostalgia in Quebec culture and is especially present in the province's vibrant but deeply wistful cinema. In Québécois cinema, nostalgia not only denotes a sentimental longing for the bucolic pleasures of bygone French-Canadian traditions, but, as this edited collection suggests, it evokes the etymological sense of the term, which underscores the element of pain (algos) associated with the longing for a return home (nostos).Whether it is in grandiloquent historical melodramas such as Séraphin: un homme et son péché (Binamé 2002), intimate realist dramas like Tout ce que tu possèdes (Émond 2012), charming art films like C.R.A.Z.Y. (Vallée 2005), or even gory horror movies like Sur le Seuil (Tessier 2003), the contemporary Québécois screen projects an image of shared suffering that unites the nation through a melancholy search for home.

Liz Czach is Associate Professor in the Department of English and Film Studies at the University of Alberta. From 1995-2005 she was a programmer of Canadian film at the Toronto International Film Festival. She has contributed essays on Quebec cinema to Transnational Stardom (2013) and Celebrity Cultures in Canada (WLU Press, 2016), among others André Loiselle is Dean of Humanities and teaches film studies at St. Thomas University. His main areas of research are Canadian cinema, theatricality in film and the horror film. He has published over 40 articles and chapters in anthologies, as well as a dozen books, including The Canadian Horror Film (2015, with Gina Freitag).

Introduction
SECTION I—Indigenous Longings
1 Landscape, Trauma, and Identity Le Torrent
SECTION II—Yearning for a Pre-Modern Quebec
2 The Quebec Heritage Film
3 “La Nostalgie de la maison inconnue”: The Ethics of Memory in Bernard Émond’s Recent Work
4 Fingerless (Anti)Christ: A Reminiscence of the Church in 1966 in Denys Arcand’s Les Invasions Barbares and Éric Tessier’s Sur le Seuil
SECTION III—Gendered Suffering
5 The Dys-comforts of Home in Quebec Gothic Horror Cinema
6 Men in Pain: Home, Nostalgia, and Masculinity in Twenty-First-Century Quebec Film
SECTION IV—Métropole and Région
7 The Rural (Re)Turns of Young Protagonists in Contemporary Quebec Films
8 Return to Abitibi in Bernard Émond’s La donation
9 Quebec–Montreal: Time, Space, and Memory in Robert Lepage’s Le Confessionnal and Bernard Émond’s La Neuvaine
Works Cited
About the Contributors
Index

Erscheinungsdatum
Verlagsort Waterloo, Ontario
Sprache englisch
Maße 152 x 229 mm
Gewicht 408 g
Themenwelt Kunst / Musik / Theater Film / TV
Geisteswissenschaften Geschichte Regional- / Ländergeschichte
Sozialwissenschaften Kommunikation / Medien Medienwissenschaft
ISBN-10 1-77112-433-4 / 1771124334
ISBN-13 978-1-77112-433-1 / 9781771124331
Zustand Neuware
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