|
|
|
|
editorial
welcome to Issue 22 of our journal!
There is nothing connected with the staging of a motion picture that a woman cannot do as easily as a man.
As editors of the Special Women's Issue of Senses of Cinema, we could not have expressed it more eloquently. This special issue was conceived as an opportunity to highlight how women have in fact played a pivotal role in all aspects of the staging of motion pictures throughout the history of filmmaking. The extensive contribution to cinema that women have made and continue to make has, as with many other historical accounts of the visual arts, not always received adequate acknowledgment.
Women have been involved in the history of cinema from its earliest beginnings. Notable figures include our own trailblazer, Australia's first female producer Kate Howarde (profiled in Ina Bertrand's essay) and the pioneering French filmmaker Alice Guy-Blaché (the world's first woman director and according to many accounts, the first director of a fiction film, The Cabbage Fairy, 1896). Women have sometimes worked in tandem with their male filmmaker partners, as Jan Chapman notes in her Longford Lyell Lecture in relation to the Australian examples of Elsa Chauvel and Lottie Lyell, and as Susan Buchan also observes in her history of Swiss women filmmakers. Equally, women have been independently and impressively at forefront of cinematic movements, from the avant-garde filmmakers of earlier periods, Germaine Dulac and Maya Deren, to the precociously talented work of young Iranian director Samira Makhmalbaf (see Adrian Danks' The House that Mohsen Built).
Women have been everywhere in the cinema, behind and in front of the camera, in supporting and starring roles, writing, critiquing and documenting the medium. In some cases, they have combined many of these roles in one brief, fascinating career, as with the maverick figure of the late actor, writer and director Zoë Lund, featured in Adrian Martin's Special Dossier.
The broad topic of women writing their own history and giving expression to their feelings, desires and experience is broached in Bérénice Reynaud's landmark essay on the overlooked, Wanda, Barbara Loden's only film. Loden's story is archetypal: as an actress and wife, she was 'read' and defined by men as an object of desire. She fought these constraints to find her own voice and means of expression. This issue celebrates women who have not only contributed to the history of cinema but who have fought dominant stereotypes and expectations.
In terms of debates regarding '70s feminist film theory and the question of female desire, Patricia MacCormack, in a fascinating piece that combines cinephilia with theory, outlines a notion of cinesexuality and desire that is beyond gender and specific to the cinema as a realm of affects. In the approach she advocates, cinema is less a medium of representation and more a complex and multi-faceted encounter between spectator and image in which meanings of gender and propriety are problematised.
We have been impressed with the level of interest and range of proposals to our call for contributions. As a result, we have decided to extend the focus on women over two consecutive issues. We hope, with this first instalment, to give an indication of the extraordinary breadth, diversity and talent of women working with celluloid.
Special thanks for this issue go to Jodi Brooks, William D. Routt, Chris Howard, Kent Jones and Ray Privett.
Rose Capp and Fiona A. Villella
This issue marks the commencement of Michelle Carey as Great Directors Editor and Albert Fung as Great Directors Web Designer. Senses of Cinema acknowledges and thanks Jan Chandler and Mairead Phillips for their contributions as Senses of Cinema Manager. In particular, it thanks Mairead Phillips for her invaluable contribution, expertise and tireless support as editorial assistant to the journal since December 2000 and wishes her all the very best for the future.
go to Contents, Issue 22
Senses of Cinema is
an online film journal devoted to the serious and eclectic discussion
of cinema. It has been set up to address a lack of cinephilic writing
in local discourse, that is, writing sprung from the desire to think and
write seriously, knowledgeably and passionately about film.
Senses of Cinema is unique in its eclecticism: it encourages articles of all styles
(casual, personal, academic, critical, impressionistic and poetic - or a
combination of these), analytical approaches (thematic, psychoanalytic,
etc) and subject matter. The only criteria that we prescribe are that all
articles are demonstrably passionate, serious, intelligent and insightful
reflections and/or analyses on the topic of cinema.
Senses of Cinema promotes various divergent "voices" that speak to a wide and
diverse audience. It aims to bring together a mix of writers: established
and emerging, theorists and un-published cinephiles, filmmakers and
film programmers, and local and international writers.
We are particularly
committed to discussing art, independent, experimental and third world cinemas
(everything from Renoir to Antonioni to Solàs to Oshima to Morrissey
to Jost to Friedrich to Snow, feature films as well as short films) , theorising
new encounters with digital technologies, and promoting writing that increases
one's understanding and appreciation of cinema.
We recognise that an object as ephemeral and ethereal as cinema continues to fascinate,
to provoke, to inspire, to turn on, to evolve. And it is in relation to
this object that we seek to facilitate and encourage expression and appreciation.
Want to contribute to this journal?
about us
If you have a suggestion for the links page, contact Albert.
Senses of Cinema
(ISSN 1443-4059) is published approximately bi-monthly by Senses of Cinema
Inc.
Copyright 1999-2002 Senses of Cinema Inc and the contributors.
As under the Copyright Act 1968 (Australia), no part of this journal may be reproduced by any process without the written permission of the editors except for the purposes of private study, research, criticism or review. These works may be read online, downloaded and copied for the above purposes but must not be copied for any other individuals or organisations. The work itself must not be published in either print or electronic form, be edited or otherwise altered or used as a teaching resource without the express permission of the author.
All views expressed in this journal are those of the authors and not the editors (unless indicated).
Senses of Cinema Inc Senses of Cinema is indexed in the MLA (Modern Language
Association of America) International Bibliography and is listed in the
MLA Directory of Periodicals.
All Australian content in Senses of Cinema is indexed in APAIS
(Australian Public Affairs Information Service) of the National Library
of Australia.
All reviews of individual films published in Senses of Cinema are indexed in the Movie Review Query Engine.
|
contents great directors cteq annotations top tens about us links archive search