Screening Indigenous Australia: Space, Place and Media in Frances Calvert’s Talking Broken

Autores

  • Peter Kilroy Menzies Centre for Australian Studies / Department of Film Studies King's College London

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5007/2175-8026.2016v69n2p139

Resumo

Drawing on the fields of postcolonial studies and media theory, this article analyzes Frances Calvert’s 1990 documentary, Talking Broken, which, inter alia, looks at the role of space, place and media amongst Australia’s ‘other’ Indigenous minority, Torres Strait Islanders. The article explores the historical and geographical complexity of the space-place-media relation (particularly in terms of the centre-periphery relations between the Torres Strait and the Australian mainland), and considers the extent to which Calvert – after the Australian bicentenary of 1988 – is able to absorb and playfully challenge such formulations. More broadly, it considers the extent to which contemporary Indigenous media might go further and enact a shift from absorbing and challenging such formulations to taking control of media institutions themselves.

Biografia do Autor

Peter Kilroy, Menzies Centre for Australian Studies / Department of Film Studies King's College London

Peter Kilroy is a British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow at the Menzies Centre for Australian Studies and the Department of Film Studies at King’s College London, UK. His main research interests are in colonial, postcolonial and Indigenous media, with a particular emphasis on photography, phonography, and film.

Publicado

2016-06-07

Edição

Seção

Artigos