Joyce Wieland's 'The Far Shore'

Joyce Wieland's 'The Far Shore'

EnglishPaperback / softback
Sloan Johanne
University of Toronto Press
EAN: 9781442610606
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Detailed information

The Far Shore (1976), made under the direction of celebrated visual artist and experimental filmmaker Joyce Wieland, is one of Canada's most innovative contributions to cinema. The film borrows elements from the life of Canadian painter Tom Thomson, who is represented by the character of Tom McLeod. The main character, however, is not Tom, but the fictional creation of Eulalie de Chicoutimi, the married Québécoise woman who loves him. Using Eulalie's perspective, Wieland was able to re-frame Thomson's life and story as a romantic melodrama while infusing it with subversive commentary on gender, nature and nationalism, and ultimately, on the value of art.

Here, Wieland specialist Johanne Sloan offers a fascinating new perspective on The Far Shore, making it more accessible by discussing Wieland's utopian fusion of art and politics, the importance of landscape within Canadian culture, and the on-going struggle over the meaning of the natural environment.

EAN 9781442610606
ISBN 1442610603
Binding Paperback / softback
Publisher University of Toronto Press
Publication date May 29, 2010
Pages 144
Language English
Dimensions 178 x 127 x 7
Country Canada
Readership Professional & Scholarly
Authors Sloan Johanne
Illustrations 15 b&w illustrations
Series Canadian Cinema