Women filmmakers of the African and Asian diaspora : decolonizing the gaze, locating subjectivity

Author(s)

    • Foster, Gwendolyn Audrey

Bibliographic Information

Women filmmakers of the African and Asian diaspora : decolonizing the gaze, locating subjectivity

Gwendolyn Audrey Foster

Southern Illinois University Press, c1997

  • : pbk

Available at  / 6 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 157-168) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

An examination of the works of six contemporary black and asian women filmmakers. It also includes a detailed introduction and a chapter entitled "Other Voices", documenting the work of other black and asian filmmakers. The book analyzes the key films of Zeinabu Irene Davis, "one of a growing number of independent black women filmmakers who are actively constructing an 'oppositional gaze'"; British filmmaker Ngozi Onwurah and Julie Dash, two filmmakers working with time and space; Pratibha Parmar, a Kenyan/Indian-born British black filmmaker concerned with issues of representation, identity, cultural displacement, lesbianism and racial identity; Trinh T. Minh-ha, a Vietnamese-born artist who revolutionized documentary filmmaking by displacing the "voyeuristic gaze of the ethnographic documentary filmmaker"; and Mira Nair, a black Indian woman who concentrates on interracial identity.

by "Nielsen BookData"

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