(Re)Claiming cultural identity: Aboriginal 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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ftroyalcollart:oai:researchonline.rca.ac.uk:3778 2023-05-15T15:51:47+02:00 (Re)Claiming cultural identity: Aboriginal animation from Cape Dorset to Quickdraw Buchan, Suzanne Straw, Will Marchessault, Janine 2019-04-09 text https://researchonline.rca.ac.uk/3778/ https://researchonline.rca.ac.uk/3778/1/Cover_Figs_prepub_manu_edited-06%20Buchan_PE%20%281%29.pdf https://researchonline.rca.ac.uk/3778/8/Buchan_%28re%29claiming.pdf https://global.oup.com/academic/product/the-oxford-handbook-of-canadian-cinema-9780190229108?cc=gb&lang=en&# en eng Oxford University Press https://researchonline.rca.ac.uk/3778/1/Cover_Figs_prepub_manu_edited-06%20Buchan_PE%20%281%29.pdf https://researchonline.rca.ac.uk/3778/8/Buchan_%28re%29claiming.pdf Buchan, Suzanne, 2019, Book Section, (Re)Claiming cultural identity: Aboriginal animation from Cape Dorset to Quickdraw In: Straw, Will and Marchessault, Janine, (eds.) The Oxford Handbook of Canadian Cinema. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780190229108 cc_by_nc_nd_4 CC-BY-NC-ND W900 Others in Creative Arts and Design Book Section NonPeerReviewed 2019 ftroyalcollart 2021-04-15T22:55:50Z 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, including Quickdraw Animation Society’s Aboriginal Youth Animation Project, its contribution to Canadian film culture, and work with different social, cultural and ethnic groups. Book Part Cape Dorset eskimo* inuit Nunavut Royal College of Art, London: RCA Research Online Canada Cape Dorset ENVELOPE(-76.482,-76.482,64.179,64.179) Indian Lorna ENVELOPE(62.789,62.789,-67.787,-67.787) Nunavut |
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Open Polar |
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Royal College of Art, London: RCA Research Online |
op_collection_id |
ftroyalcollart |
language |
English |
topic |
W900 Others in Creative Arts and Design |
spellingShingle |
W900 Others in Creative Arts and Design Buchan, Suzanne (Re)Claiming cultural identity: Aboriginal animation from Cape Dorset to Quickdraw |
topic_facet |
W900 Others in Creative Arts and Design |
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, including Quickdraw Animation Society’s Aboriginal Youth Animation Project, its contribution to Canadian film culture, and work with different social, cultural and ethnic groups. |
author2 |
Straw, Will Marchessault, Janine |
format |
Book Part |
author |
Buchan, Suzanne |
author_facet |
Buchan, Suzanne |
author_sort |
Buchan, Suzanne |
title |
(Re)Claiming cultural identity: Aboriginal animation from Cape Dorset to Quickdraw |
title_short |
(Re)Claiming cultural identity: Aboriginal animation from Cape Dorset to Quickdraw |
title_full |
(Re)Claiming cultural identity: Aboriginal animation from Cape Dorset to Quickdraw |
title_fullStr |
(Re)Claiming cultural identity: Aboriginal animation from Cape Dorset to Quickdraw |
title_full_unstemmed |
(Re)Claiming cultural identity: Aboriginal animation from Cape Dorset to Quickdraw |
title_sort |
(re)claiming cultural identity: aboriginal animation from cape dorset to quickdraw |
publisher |
Oxford University Press |
publishDate |
2019 |
url |
https://researchonline.rca.ac.uk/3778/ https://researchonline.rca.ac.uk/3778/1/Cover_Figs_prepub_manu_edited-06%20Buchan_PE%20%281%29.pdf https://researchonline.rca.ac.uk/3778/8/Buchan_%28re%29claiming.pdf https://global.oup.com/academic/product/the-oxford-handbook-of-canadian-cinema-9780190229108?cc=gb&lang=en&# |
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 |
https://researchonline.rca.ac.uk/3778/1/Cover_Figs_prepub_manu_edited-06%20Buchan_PE%20%281%29.pdf https://researchonline.rca.ac.uk/3778/8/Buchan_%28re%29claiming.pdf Buchan, Suzanne, 2019, Book Section, (Re)Claiming cultural identity: Aboriginal animation from Cape Dorset to Quickdraw In: Straw, Will and Marchessault, Janine, (eds.) The Oxford Handbook of Canadian Cinema. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780190229108 |
op_rights |
cc_by_nc_nd_4 |
op_rightsnorm |
CC-BY-NC-ND |
_version_ |
1766387183658205184 |