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form y separately published work icon Wind single work   film/TV  
Issue Details: First known date: 1999... 1999 Wind
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

A short drama set in the cold, bleak terrain of the high country in 1857, as a young black tracker and his elderly sergeant move on the trail of a killer.

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

    • c
      Australia,
      c
      :
      Mayfan ,
      1999 .
      Link: U9179Scene extracts Three digital extracts from the original cinematic release.
      Extent: 24 min.p.
      Series: Crossing Tracks series - publisher

      'The Crossing Tracks 30-minute drama series is an initiative of the Australian Film Commission (AFC) in collaboration with SBS Independent and the ABC.' Source: www.afc.gov.au (Sighted 05/02/2008).

Works about this Work

The sizes of truth: how Ivan Sen’s Wind helps us understand a complex contemporary identity Anita Donovan , 2018 single work essay
— Appears in: NEW: Emerging scholars in Australian Indigenous Studies , March vol. 4 no. 1 2018; (p. 101-104)

— Review of Wind Ivan Sen , 1999 single work film/TV
'Set in 1867, Ivan Sen’s short film Wind tells the story of a young Indigenous tracker named Jess who, in the process of hunting a wanted criminal with his sergeant, begins to trace the footsteps of a community and a heritage he has barely known. This story is set entirely in the mountains, with few references to the wider contexts of Jess and the sergeant, placing it almost completely apart from the plateaus of central ‘big’ truths (Read 2002, p. 54) that constitute the crux of Aboriginal Australian history. Jess’ story acts as a representation of one of the complex anomalies that were a part of early frontier life. It not only tells, but shows audiences that it’s just not that simple.'
The sizes of truth: how Ivan Sen’s Wind helps us understand a complex contemporary identity Anita Donovan , 2018 single work essay
— Appears in: NEW: Emerging scholars in Australian Indigenous Studies , March vol. 4 no. 1 2018; (p. 101-104)

— Review of Wind Ivan Sen , 1999 single work film/TV
'Set in 1867, Ivan Sen’s short film Wind tells the story of a young Indigenous tracker named Jess who, in the process of hunting a wanted criminal with his sergeant, begins to trace the footsteps of a community and a heritage he has barely known. This story is set entirely in the mountains, with few references to the wider contexts of Jess and the sergeant, placing it almost completely apart from the plateaus of central ‘big’ truths (Read 2002, p. 54) that constitute the crux of Aboriginal Australian history. Jess’ story acts as a representation of one of the complex anomalies that were a part of early frontier life. It not only tells, but shows audiences that it’s just not that simple.'
The sizes of truth: how Ivan Sen’s Wind helps us understand a complex contemporary identity Anita Donovan , 2018 single work essay
— Appears in: NEW: Emerging scholars in Australian Indigenous Studies , March vol. 4 no. 1 2018; (p. 101-104)

— Review of Wind Ivan Sen , 1999 single work film/TV
'Set in 1867, Ivan Sen’s short film Wind tells the story of a young Indigenous tracker named Jess who, in the process of hunting a wanted criminal with his sergeant, begins to trace the footsteps of a community and a heritage he has barely known. This story is set entirely in the mountains, with few references to the wider contexts of Jess and the sergeant, placing it almost completely apart from the plateaus of central ‘big’ truths (Read 2002, p. 54) that constitute the crux of Aboriginal Australian history. Jess’ story acts as a representation of one of the complex anomalies that were a part of early frontier life. It not only tells, but shows audiences that it’s just not that simple.'
The sizes of truth: how Ivan Sen’s Wind helps us understand a complex contemporary identity Anita Donovan , 2018 single work essay
— Appears in: NEW: Emerging scholars in Australian Indigenous Studies , March vol. 4 no. 1 2018; (p. 101-104)

— Review of Wind Ivan Sen , 1999 single work film/TV
'Set in 1867, Ivan Sen’s short film Wind tells the story of a young Indigenous tracker named Jess who, in the process of hunting a wanted criminal with his sergeant, begins to trace the footsteps of a community and a heritage he has barely known. This story is set entirely in the mountains, with few references to the wider contexts of Jess and the sergeant, placing it almost completely apart from the plateaus of central ‘big’ truths (Read 2002, p. 54) that constitute the crux of Aboriginal Australian history. Jess’ story acts as a representation of one of the complex anomalies that were a part of early frontier life. It not only tells, but shows audiences that it’s just not that simple.'
Last amended 9 Mar 2016 13:14:00
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