ISBN:
141758341X
,
905356750X
,
9789048505401
Language:
English
Pages:
Online-Ressource (224 p)
Edition:
Online-Ausg. Palo Alto, Calif ebrary 2009 Electronic reproduction; Available via World Wide Web
Parallel Title:
Print version Shooting the Family : Transnational Media and Intercultural Values
DDC:
302.23
Keywords:
Mass media and the family
;
Family
;
Film, TV & radio
;
Aufsatzsammlung
Abstract:
Do contemporary movements of migration and the ever-increasing abundance of audiovisual media correspond to - or even cause - shifts in the defenition of both the bourgeois nuclear family and the tribal extended family? In Shooting the Family, twelve authors investigate the transfigured role of the family in a transnational world in which intercultural values are negotiated through mass media like film and television, as well as through particularistic media like home movies and videos. "Shooting the Family" has a double meaning. On the one hand, this book claims that the family is under pressure from the forces of globalization and migration; it is the family that risks being shot to pieces. On the other hand, family matters of all kinds, including family values, are increasingly being constructed and refigured in a mediated form. The audiovisual family has become an important medium for intercultural affairs - this is a family that is being re-established as a place of security and comfort in times of upheaval; it is the family shot by cameras that register and simultaneously create new family values
Description / Table of Contents:
Table of Contents; Introduction (Patricia Pisters and Wim Staat); Part 1: The Family and the Media; 1. Capturing the Family: Home Video in the Age of Digital Reproduction (José van Dijck); 2. Migrant Children Mediating Family Relations (Sonja de Leeuw); 3. The Shooting Family: Gender and Ethnicity in the New Dutch Police Series (Joke Hermes and Joost de Bruin); Part 2: Private Matters, Public Families; 4. Family Portrait: Queering the Nuclear Family in François Ozon's Sitcom (Jaap Kooijman); 5. Radicalism Begins at Home: Fundamentalism and the Family in My Son the Fanatic (Laura Copier)
Description / Table of Contents:
6. Family Matters in Eat Drink Man Woman: Food Envy, Family Longing, or Intercultural Knowledge through the Senses? (Tarja Laine)Part 3: Translating Family Values; 7. Saved by Betrayal? Ang Lee's Translations of "Chinese" Family Ideology (Jeroen de Kloet); 8. Eurydice's Diasporic Voice: Marcel Camus's Black Orpheus and the Family in Poet's Hell (Catherine M. Lord); 9. Archiving the (Secret) Family in Egoyan's Family Viewing (Marie-Aude Baronian); Part 4: Loving Families; 10. Suspending the Body: Biopower and the Contradictions of Family Values (Sudeep Dasgupta)
Description / Table of Contents:
11. Unfamiliar Film: Sisters Unsettling Family Habits (Wim Staat)12. Micropolitics of the Migrant Family in Accented Cinema: Love and Creativity in Empire (Patricia Pisters); List of Contributors; Index
Note:
Includes bibliographical references and index
,
Electronic reproduction; Available via World Wide Web
URL:
OAPEN Library: download the publication
URL:
OAPEN Library: description of the publication
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