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Media type:
E-Book
Title:
Scotland
:
Global Cinema: Genres, Modes and Identities
Contains:
Frontmatter
Contents
Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Fantasy Scotlands
CHAPTER 1 Comedy: Global / Local Identities
CHAPTER 2 Road Movie: Scotland in the World
CHAPTER 3 Bollywood: Non-Resident Indian- Scotland
CHAPTER 4 (Loch Ness) Monster Movie: A Return to Primal Scotland
CHAPTER 5 Horror Film: History Hydes in the Highlands
CHAPTER 6 Costume Drama: From Men in Kilts to Developing Diasporas
CHAPTER 7 Gangster Film: Glasgow’s Transnational Identities
CHAPTER 8 Social Realist Melodrama: Middle-class Minorities and Floundering Fathers
CHAPTER 9 Female Friendship/US Indie: Women Talking
CHAPTER 10 Art Cinema: The Global Limits of Cinematic Scotland
Conclusion
Select Bibliography
Index
Description:
GBS_insertPreviewButtonPopup('ISBN:9780748633913);What is your favourite fantasy Scotland? Perhaps you enjoyed Whisky Galore! or Brigadoon, or maybe The Wicker Man is to your taste, Local Hero or Highlander? Yet have you also considered Kuch Kuch Hota Hai, Rob Roy, Dog Soldiers, Danny the Dog, Festival, The Water Horse, Carla's Song, Trainspotting and Red Road? Scotland: Global Cinema is the first book to focus exclusively on the unprecedented explosion of filmmaking in Scotland in the 1990s and 2000s. It explores the various cinematic fantasies of Scotland created by contemporary filmmakers from all over the world - including Scotland, England, France, the United States and India - who braved the weather to shoot in Scotland. Significantly broadening the scope of previous debates, Scotland: Global Cinema provides analysis of ten different genres and modes prevalent in the 1990s/2000s: the comedy, road movie, Bollywood extravaganza, (Loch Ness) monster movie, horror film, costume drama, gangster flick, social realist melodrama, female friendship/US indie movie, and art cinema. These various chapters suggest a wealth of different histories of cinema in Scotland, and uncover the numerous identities - national, transnational, diasporic, global/local, gendered, sexual, religious - created by these approaches. Cinema in Scotland is situated in a global context through analysis of the intersection of transversal flows of filmmaking, tourism, trade and transnational fantasy typical of globalization, as they meet and mingle against the world famous cinematic landscapes of Scotland."