(Re)claiming Aboriginal identity: Inuit animation from Cape Dorset to Quickdraw

The NFB’s Animation Department has produced internationally respected animated films based on aboriginal culture and heritage. In the 1970’s, with support from the Department of Indian and Northern Affairs, the NFB produced a series of films on Inuit legends that were participatory in nature, includ...

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Main Author: Buchan, Suzanne
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.mdx.ac.uk/18401/
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spelling ftmiddlesex:oai:eprints.mdx.ac.uk:18401 2023-05-15T15:51:47+02:00 (Re)claiming Aboriginal identity: Inuit animation from Cape Dorset to Quickdraw Buchan, Suzanne 2015-03-28 https://eprints.mdx.ac.uk/18401/ unknown Buchan, Suzanne </view/creators/Buchan=3ASuzanne=3A=3A.html> (2015) (Re)claiming Aboriginal identity: Inuit animation from Cape Dorset to Quickdraw. In: Society for Cinema and Media Studies Conference, 25-29 Mar 2015, Montreal, Canada. . [Conference or Workshop Item] Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed 2015 ftmiddlesex 2022-03-03T06:42:12Z The NFB’s Animation Department has produced internationally respected animated films based on aboriginal culture and heritage. In the 1970’s, with support from the Department of Indian and Northern Affairs, the NFB produced a series of films on Inuit legends that were participatory in nature, including Co Hoedeman’s collaboration with Inuit artists for Owl and the Raven (1973), and Caroline Leaf’s The Owl who Married a Goose (1974). Concurrently, aboriginal animation was supported by the NFB’s workshop in Cape Dorset initiated by Wolf Koenig, resulting in Animation from Cape Dorset (1973), a compilation of 16 short works. While Lorna Roth notes they were devoid of political, social or legal themes or topics (2005: 99), I argue that these films, made collectively by young Inuit filmmakers, are a more effective visual and aural expression of their culture’s artistic and linguistic heritage than the films produced in the NFB Animation Department, in a similar way that W.S. Van Dyke’s docudrama Eskimo (1933) was a cultural corrective to Robert Flaherty’s Nanook of the North (1922). The Canada Council’s establishment of the Aboriginal Arts Secretariat (1994) and the creation of the Nunavut Territory (1999) led to a blossoming of Inuit animation. I examine the artistic and narrative legacy of the Cape Dorset animation in the Nunavut Animation Lab, set up in 2006, to reclaim their cultures’ arts heritage, storytelling and identity. This discussion is framed within a larger context of independent animation in Canada, its contribution to Canadian film culture, and work with different social, cultural and ethnic groups. Conference Object Cape Dorset eskimo* inuit Nunavut Middlesex University London: Research Repository Canada Cape Dorset ENVELOPE(-76.482,-76.482,64.179,64.179) Indian Lorna ENVELOPE(62.789,62.789,-67.787,-67.787) Nunavut
institution Open Polar
collection Middlesex University London: Research Repository
op_collection_id ftmiddlesex
language unknown
description The NFB’s Animation Department has produced internationally respected animated films based on aboriginal culture and heritage. In the 1970’s, with support from the Department of Indian and Northern Affairs, the NFB produced a series of films on Inuit legends that were participatory in nature, including Co Hoedeman’s collaboration with Inuit artists for Owl and the Raven (1973), and Caroline Leaf’s The Owl who Married a Goose (1974). Concurrently, aboriginal animation was supported by the NFB’s workshop in Cape Dorset initiated by Wolf Koenig, resulting in Animation from Cape Dorset (1973), a compilation of 16 short works. While Lorna Roth notes they were devoid of political, social or legal themes or topics (2005: 99), I argue that these films, made collectively by young Inuit filmmakers, are a more effective visual and aural expression of their culture’s artistic and linguistic heritage than the films produced in the NFB Animation Department, in a similar way that W.S. Van Dyke’s docudrama Eskimo (1933) was a cultural corrective to Robert Flaherty’s Nanook of the North (1922). The Canada Council’s establishment of the Aboriginal Arts Secretariat (1994) and the creation of the Nunavut Territory (1999) led to a blossoming of Inuit animation. I examine the artistic and narrative legacy of the Cape Dorset animation in the Nunavut Animation Lab, set up in 2006, to reclaim their cultures’ arts heritage, storytelling and identity. This discussion is framed within a larger context of independent animation in Canada, its contribution to Canadian film culture, and work with different social, cultural and ethnic groups.
format Conference Object
author Buchan, Suzanne
spellingShingle Buchan, Suzanne
(Re)claiming Aboriginal identity: Inuit animation from Cape Dorset to Quickdraw
author_facet Buchan, Suzanne
author_sort Buchan, Suzanne
title (Re)claiming Aboriginal identity: Inuit animation from Cape Dorset to Quickdraw
title_short (Re)claiming Aboriginal identity: Inuit animation from Cape Dorset to Quickdraw
title_full (Re)claiming Aboriginal identity: Inuit animation from Cape Dorset to Quickdraw
title_fullStr (Re)claiming Aboriginal identity: Inuit animation from Cape Dorset to Quickdraw
title_full_unstemmed (Re)claiming Aboriginal identity: Inuit animation from Cape Dorset to Quickdraw
title_sort (re)claiming aboriginal identity: inuit animation from cape dorset to quickdraw
publishDate 2015
url https://eprints.mdx.ac.uk/18401/
long_lat ENVELOPE(-76.482,-76.482,64.179,64.179)
ENVELOPE(62.789,62.789,-67.787,-67.787)
geographic Canada
Cape Dorset
Indian
Lorna
Nunavut
geographic_facet Canada
Cape Dorset
Indian
Lorna
Nunavut
genre Cape Dorset
eskimo*
inuit
Nunavut
genre_facet Cape Dorset
eskimo*
inuit
Nunavut
op_relation Buchan, Suzanne </view/creators/Buchan=3ASuzanne=3A=3A.html> (2015) (Re)claiming Aboriginal identity: Inuit animation from Cape Dorset to Quickdraw. In: Society for Cinema and Media Studies Conference, 25-29 Mar 2015, Montreal, Canada. . [Conference or Workshop Item]
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