Northern exposures
An edition of Northern exposures (2004)
photographing and filming the Canadian north, 1920-45
By Peter G. Geller
Publish Date
2004
Publisher
UBC Press
Language
eng
Pages
258
Description:
"Northern Exposures looks at the photographic and film practice of the three major colonial institutions in the Arctic and Sub-Arctic in the first half of the twentieth century - the Canadian government, the Anglican Church of Canada, and the Hudson's Bay Company. Their visual representations of the region were widely circulated in official publications and presented in film shows and lantern slide lectures." "It sheds new light on twentieth-century visual culture and on the relationship between photographic ways of seeing and the expansion of colonial power; while raising important questions about the role of visual representation in interpreting the past. Generously illustrated with over eighty-five archival images from photographs and films of the period, this book will appeal to anyone interested in Canadian and cultural history, Northern and Aboriginal studies, film and communication, art history, anthropology, and visual culture."--BOOK JACKET
subjects: Documentary photography, History, In motion pictures, Inuit, Inuit in motion pictures, Motion pictures, Photography, Pictorial works, Social aspects, Social aspects of Visual communication, Visual communication, Inuit, canada, Photography, history, Motion pictures, canada, Canada, pictorial works, Ouvrages illustrès, Histoire, Inuit au cinéma, Communication visuelle, Aspect social, Photographie documentaire, Photographie, Cinéma, Photography in ethnology, Motion pictures in ethnology
Places: Canada, Northern Canada
Times: 20th century