Intermedial Art Practices as Cultural Resilience

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B01=Camille Manfredi
B01=Lindsay Blair
Breton
Brittany
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=AC
Category=AGA
Category=AV
Category=DSB
Category=HPN
Category=JBCC
Category=JBCT
Category=JFC
Category=JFD
Category=QDTN
contemporary
COP=United Kingdom
cultural memory preservation
culture
Daniel Reeves
Delivery_Pre-order
digital
digital humanities
diversity
endangered languages research
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_music
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Europe
film
film-poetry
France
French
Gaelic
Helen MacAlister
hybrid
hybrid media practices
identity
image
John Burnside
Language_English
literature
Margaret Tait
Mikael Baudu
oral
PA=Not yet available
peripheral cultures
Pierre Stephan
poetry
poetry film analysis
Price_€100 and above
PS=Forthcoming
Roseanne Watt
Scotland
Scottish
softlaunch
song
story
technology
Thomas A Clark
transmedia
transmedial studies
United Kingdom
Yann Madec

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032536019
  • Weight: 540g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Sep 2024
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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This innovative collection of essays is focused on the idea of transmedialization: the ways that the traditional forms of the predominantly oral cultures of Scotland and Brittany (poetry, song and story) can be transformed by the use of hybrid forms and new digital technologies.

The volume invites readers from a range of disciplines – music, art, literature, history, cultural memory studies, anthropology or media studies – to consider how an intermedial aesthetics of the edge can enable these distinctive cultures to thrive. The languages of both cultures are presently endangered and the essays seek to connect notions of language with a culture which can align its traditions with the concerns of the present day. The collection proceeds from a conceptual analysis of poetry film, peripheral vision and the concerns of peripheral communities to an examination of inventive practices in the film-poem, experimental video, film portrait, word-image, digitised music, sound-image and genre-contestant narratives. The collection also includes contributions from creative practitioners who utilize a range of hybrid forms to revitalize the traditional vernacular cultures of Scotland and Brittany.

The book will be of interest to scholars working in art history, literature, film studies, media studies, music, cultural theory, and philosophy.

Lindsay Blair is Associate Professor of Visual Studies and Cultural Theory at the University of the Highlands and Islands. She is the Principal Investigator of the “Hands Across the Sea” project (https://handsacrosstheseacom.wordpress.com/). Blair’s previous work on word-image and the film poem resulted in a monograph on the American Surrealist, Joseph Cornell, entitled Joseph Cornell’s Vision of Spiritual Order. Blair was then engaged by the BBC as Associate Producer for an Omnibus Documentary, Joseph Cornell: Worlds in a Box. Her recent research which has focused on word and image in the art of the Highlands and Islands of Scotland has been described as “a re- assessment of the tired narratives of Highland visual culture, shifting understanding to more international and contemporary discourses”. Examples of published outputs include: “Dalriada, the Lordship of the Isles and the Northern Rim: De-centralising the Visual Culture of the Highlands and Islands of Scotland”, Narratives Unfolding: National Art Histories in an Unfinished World (2017), ‘”Mutations from Below”: The Land Raiders of Reef and An Suileachan by Will Maclean and Marian Leven’, Northern Scotland (2020) and “The Photographs of A.B. Ovenstone and the Re-Invention of the Scottish Amateur Tradition”, The Journal of Victorian Culture (2023).

Camille Manfredi is Professor of Scottish literature and visual arts at the University of Brest in Western Brittany. Her published work includes the monographs Alasdair Gray: le faiseur d’Ecosse (2012) and Nature and Space in Contemporary Scottish Writing and Art (2019), as well as the edited volumes Alasdair Gray: Ink for Worlds (2014) and Brittany-Scotland: Contacts, Transfers and Dissonances (2017), with Michel Byrne. She is the co-editor, with Marie-Odile Pittin-Hedon and Scott Hames, of Scottish Writing After Devolution: Edges of the New (2022) in which she contributed a chapter on “Scottish Audio- and Film-Poetry: Writing, Sounding, Imaging Twenty-First-Century Scotland”. She is the Co-investigator of the “Hands Across the Sea” project.