
The term "queer cinema" is often used to name at least three cultural events: 1) an emergent visual culture that boldly identifies as queer; 2) a body of narrative, documentary, and experimental work previously collated under the rubric of homosexual or lesbian, gay, bisexual, and trans (LGBT) cinema; 3) a means of critically reading and evaluating films and other visual media through the lens of sexuality. By this expansive account, queer cinema encompasses more than a century of filmmaking, film criticism, and film reception, and the past twenty-five years have seen the idea of "queer cinema" expand further as a descriptor for a global arts practice. As the first of its kind, The Oxford Handbook of Queer Cinema treats these three currents as art and critical practice, bringing the canon of queer cinema together with a new generation of makers and scholars.The Handbook's contributors include scholars who research the worldwide canon of queer cinema, those who are uniquely positioned to address three decades of its particular importance, and those best positioned to ponder the forms it is taking or may take in our new century, namely digital media that moves in new circuits. In eight sections, they explore the many forms that queer cinema takes across time, discussing narrative, experimental, documentary, and genre filmmaking, including pornography. Likewise, although the study of cinema and media is not restricted to a single method, chapters showcase the unique combination of textual analysis, industrial and production history, interpretation, ethnography, and archival research that this field enables. For example, chapters analyze the ways in which queer cinema both is and is not self-evidently an object for study by examining films that reinforce negative understandings of queerness alongside those that liberate the subject; and by naming the films that are newly queered, while noting that many queerly-made texts await discovery.
This volume investigates the multifaceted definition and historical trajectory of queer cinema as both a creative practice and a critical framework for visual analysis. The text assembles a diverse group of scholars to examine how queer cinema has evolved from early LGBT-identified works into a global arts practice that encompasses narrative, documentary, experimental, and digital media. By synthesizing industrial history with textual analysis, the contributors argue that queer cinema functions as a dynamic, shifting category that requires ongoing re-evaluation in the twenty-first century.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts identify this work as a foundational reference text that formalizes the study of queer cinema within academic discourse. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the breadth of the contributors' research across international and historical contexts.
Page Count:
860
Publication Date:
2021-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190878010
ISBN-13:
9780190878016
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