AustLit logo

AustLit

y separately published work icon Studies in Australasian Cinema periodical   peer reviewed assertion
Date: 2007-
Issue Details: First known date: 2007... 2007 Studies in Australasian Cinema
The material on this page is available to AustLit subscribers. If you are a subscriber or are from a subscribing organisation, please log in to gain full access. To explore options for subscribing to this unique teaching, research, and publishing resource for Australian culture and storytelling, please contact us or find out more.

Issues

y separately published work icon Studies in Australasian Cinema vol. 14 no. 3 2020 20904699 2020 periodical issue

'To say that 2020 has been a strange year is an understatement. Many who work in screen production, the arts, and the the creative sectors more broadly have suffered from cancellations, loss of income, delays, disconnection, and the associated stresses of pandemic life. At the same time screen texts and cultures have saved most of us – taken us through lockdown, entertained and engaged us, inspired, and sustained us perhaps more so now and in more ways than ever before. As life has changed, we see the foregrounding of the adaptability of screen works and screen culture, from COVID safe production practices to virtual audiences and the prominence of independent filmmaking, digital content creation, and online film festivals and screen events. The films, series and performances from Australasian auteurs, groups, teams, production cohorts and scholars have produced a range of cinematic, televisual and online stories and images worthy of celebration and interrogation. It is with this sense of inspiration and renewed interest that we look towards 2021.' (Anthony Lambert, Goodbye to 2020 introduction)

y separately published work icon Studies in Australasian Cinema The Business – Valuing the Screen Industry vol. 14 no. 2 Susan Kerrigan (editor), Simon Weaving (editor), 2020 20904385 2020 periodical issue

'Welcome to this special issue of Studies in Australasian Cinema, focusing on business aspects of the cinema industry. The five articles included in this special issue were developed in response to a call for papers for the 2020 Conference of the Australian Screen Production, Education and Research Association (ASPERA) which was to be held in Newcastle, NSW in June. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the event - like many others - was significantly reorganised, with only a single day of on-line sessions in place of the traditional three days of live presentations and screenings. Fortunately, many of the ASPERA researchers who had intended to come to the conference decided to complete their written contributions, and it’s their work we present here.' (Editorial introduction)

y separately published work icon Studies in Australasian Cinema vol. 14 no. 1 2020 20904158 2020 periodical issue 'The most powerful films are frequently divisive and often stay with you, making an impression that requires a response. After my first viewing of Jennifer Kent's (2019) film The Nightingale, I felt heavy and immobilised. I felt the weight of the film in my body, and at the same time was unsure as to whether to be angry at the violence or to see it as an absolute diegetic necessity; to question the spectacle of both victimhood and agency, or to loudly applaud a different representational perspective of Australian/Tasmanian history, colonial violence, space, gender and indigeneity. In truth, the film invites all of these reactions and more, as evidenced by the contributions featured in this special issue of Studies in Australasian Cinema, guest edited by Michelle Arrow and James Findlay. Multiple threads of temporality, identities, bodies, emotion, language, critique, memory, sound and location are, like the film, interwoven in a series of passionate and provocative responses, from Arrow and Findlay's vital ‘Critical Introduction’ to rigorous articles from Joanne Faulkner, Kristyn Hamer, Catriona Elder, James Findlay, and the inclusion of Rebe Taylor's remarkable conversation with Jim Everett, the film's associate producer and Aboriginal consultant, taken from the symposium ‘The Nightingale: Gender, Race and Troubled Histories on Screen’ held at the University of Technology, Sydney in December 2019.' (Editorial introduction)
y separately published work icon Studies in Australasian Cinema vol. 13 no. 2-3 2019 20903968 2019 periodical issue

'Welcome to the final issue of Studies in Australasian Cinema for 2019.

'This double issue comprises three diverse articles that take us from the creative city to reviews of Queer cinema, and on to questions surrounding the construction of an ageing female auteur/author.' (Editorial introduction)

y separately published work icon Studies in Australasian Cinema vol. 13 no. 1 2019 16543072 2019 periodical issue

'Welcome to the first issue of Studies in Australasian Cinema for 2019.

'This issue comprises two articles which deal with the paradoxical themes at work in politicised representations of gender and sexuality. In ‘Riding in cars as girls: discourses of victimhood, power and agency in Beneath Clouds and American Honey’, Samantha Cater places Australian film Beneath Clouds in a relationship with the US road movie American Honey. In doing so, the article foregrounds the overlapping themes of passivity, victimisation and objectification of young women on the one hand, and notions of resilience agency and self-determination on the other. Likewise, in charting the visibility of gay and lesbian representation/production in Australian film in the 1970s, Jessie Matheson’s ‘“about gays by gays”: The politics of representation in early Australian gay film culture, 1971–1982’, reveals the twin imperatives of developing queer film culture: challenging and subversive, on the one hand, but bound in many ways by aesthetic and industrial demands of acceptability and intelligibility.'  (Editor's Introduction)

y separately published work icon Studies in Australasian Cinema vol. 12 no. 1 2018 12831172 2018 periodical issue

'Across its history of four decades or more, a crucial component in the formation and maintenance of film studies in Australia has been the local and international exchange of ideas and critical formations facilitated by film studies (and associated) conferences and related organisations, including the Australian Screen Studies Association conferences and antecedents (ASSA, 1978–86), the biennial conference of the Film and History Association of Australia and New Zealand and its precursors (FHAANZ, 1981–2015), the Cultural Studies Association of Australasia annual conferences (CSAA, 1991–present), and most recently, the biennial conference of the Screen Studies Association of Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand (SSAAANZ 2016-present). (Editorial introduction)

y separately published work icon Studies in Australasian Cinema vol. 11 no. 2 2017 12340921 2017 periodical issue
y separately published work icon Studies in Australasian Cinema Australian Horror and Ozploitation Subtheme vol. 11 no. 1 2017 11061442 2017 periodical issue

'Welcome to the first issue of Studies in Australasian Cinema for 2017.

'This issue comprises three articles that form a special section on horror themed films, edited by Mark Ryan and Ben Goldsmith, which have developed from their editorial work last year on papers from the conference of the Screen Studies Association of Australia and New Zealand. Taken together, both Buerger’s and Balenzatugui’s varied readings of The Babadook, and Speed’s timely revisiting of White Death, constitute the Australasian screen’s role in marking an unsettled period in contemporary culture.

'As always, please enjoy this issue of Studies in Australasian Cinema.' (Anthony Lambert Journal editor’s note)

y separately published work icon Studies in Australasian Cinema vol. 10 no. 3 2016 10735585 2016 periodical issue
y separately published work icon Studies in Australasian Cinema Reviewing Australian Screen History vol. 10 no. 2 2016 9985120 2016 periodical issue
y separately published work icon Studies in Australasian Cinema Show, Don't Tell : Contemporary Screen Production Research vol. 10 no. 1 2016 9487261 2016 periodical issue
y separately published work icon Studies in Australasian Cinema Re-evaluating the Royal Commission into the Australian Moving Picture Industry, 1927–28 vol. 9 no. 3 2015 9156791 2015 periodical issue
y separately published work icon Studies in Australasian Cinema vol. 9 no. 2 2015 8972194 2015 periodical issue criticism
y separately published work icon Studies in Australasian Cinema vol. 9 no. 1 January 2015 8422898 2015 periodical issue
y separately published work icon Studies in Australasian Cinema vol. 8 no. 2/3 2014 8117171 2014 periodical issue
y separately published work icon Studies in Australasian Cinema vol. 8 no. 1 2014 7783626 2014 periodical issue
y separately published work icon Studies in Australasian Cinema Decolonizing Settler-Colonial and Pacific Screens vol. 7 no. 2-3 October Felicity Collins (editor), Jane Landman (editor), 2013 6666322 2013 periodical issue
y separately published work icon Studies in Australasian Cinema vol. 7 no. 1 March 2013 6535672 2013 periodical issue
y separately published work icon Studies in Australasian Cinema Big Screen to Small Screen : Australasian Film and Its New Formats, Part II vol. 6 no. 3 September Karina Aveyard (editor), 2013 Z1938020 2013 periodical issue
y separately published work icon Studies in Australasian Cinema Big Screen to Small Screen : Australasian Film and Its New Formats, Part 1 vol. 6 no. 2 November Karina Aveyard (editor), 2012 Z1911602 2012 periodical issue
36
X