This edited collection brings together international scholars and filmmakers with research expertise across a range of non-Western film cultures, but who have one shared aim: to challenge and offer alternatives to Eurocentric theoretical, historical perspectives in film studies.
Foreword: Graeme Harper Introduction: De-Westernizing Film Studies Part 1: (Dis-)continuities of the Cinematic Imaginary: (Non-)Representation, Discourse and Theory Chapter 1: Imagi[ni]ng the Universe: Cosmos, Otherness and Cinema Chapter 2: Questioning Discourses of diaspora: "Black" Cinema as Symptom Chapter 3: Affective Passions: The Dancing Female Body and Colonial Rupture in Zouzou (1934) and Karmen Geï (2001) Chapter 4: African Frameworks of Analysis for African Film Studies Part 2: Narrating the (Trans)Nation, Region and Community from Non-Western Perspectives Chapter 5: De-westernizing national cinema: re-imagined communities in the films of Férid Boughedir Chapter 6: Banal Transnationalism: On Makhmalbaf's "Borderless" Filmmaking Chapter 7: Griots and Talanoa Speak: Storytelling as Theoretical Frames in African and Pacific Island Cinemas Chapter 8: The Intra-East Cinema: the re-framing of an East Asian Film Sphere Part 3: New (dis-)continuities from 'within' the West Chapter 9: "A double set of glasses": Stanley Kubrick and the Midrashic Mode of Interpretation Chapter 10: Situated Bodies, Cinematic Orientations: Film and (Queer) Phenomenology Chapter 11 Has film ever been Western? Continuity and the question of building a "common" cinema Part 4: interviews Editors' note on interviews Chapter 12: "There is No Entirely Non-Western Place Left ": De-Westernizing the moving image, an interview with Coco Fusco Chapter 13: De-Westernizing Film through Experimental Practice: an interview with Patti Gaal-Holmes Chapter 14: "With Our Own Pen and Papers": an interview with Teddy E. Mattera Chapter 15: "To Colonize a Subject Matter is to Learn Nothing from it": an interview with Jonnie Clementi-Smith Chapter 16: "Isn't It Strange that 'World' means Everything Outside the West?": an interview with Rod Stoneman Chapter 17: Beyond Stereotypes and Preconceptions: an interview with Farida Benlyazid Chapter 18: "About Structure, Not about Individual Instances": an interview with Daniel Lindvall Chapter 19: "Still Waiting for a Reciprocal De-Westernization": an interview with Mohammed Bakrim Chapter 20: "Moving Away from a Sense of Cultures as Pure Spaces ": an interview with Deborah Shaw Chapter 21: Nu Third Queer Cinema: an interview with Campbell X Chapter 22: "To Start with a Blank Slate of Free Choices": an interview with Kuljit Bhamra Chapter 23: "The Crazy Dream of living without the Other": an interview with Olivier Barlet Chapter 24: "De-Westernizing as Double Move": an interview with John Akomfrah
Saër Maty Bâ is a temporary Lecturer Film Studies at Bangor University. Prior to joining Bangor, he had held fellowships at the universities of St Andrews, East London and Porstmouth. His research blurs boundaries between diaspora, film, media, and cultural studies. His articles, and book and film reviews have appeared in the journals Film International, Transnational Cinemas, Studies in Documentary Film Senses in Cinema, and Cultural Studies Review. He is co-editor with Will Higbee of the Journal of Media Practice/Special Issue: Re-presenting diaspora in cinema and new (digital) media (2010). Bâ is an associate editor, translator, contributor and editorial board member within The Encyclopedia of Global Human Migration project (2012).
Will Higbee is a Senior Lecturer in Film Studies at the University of Exeter. He is the author of Matthieu Kassovitz (2007) and the co-editor with Sarah Leahy of Studies in French Cinema: UK Perspectives 1985-2010 (2010) and with Saër Maty Bâ of a special edition of the Journal of Media Practice: 'Re-presenting Diaspora in Cinema and New (Digital) Media'. He is a member of the editorial board of the journal Studies in French Cinema and has published various articles on contemporary French cinema, cinemas of the North African diaspora in France and questions of transnational cinemas in journals such as Transnational Cinemas, French Cultural Studies and Africultures. He is currently completing a monograph entitled Post-beur cinema: Maghrebi-French and North African émigré filmmaking in France since 2000.