“<i>Indigenous Ecocinema</i> is a deeply considered, meticulously researched, and cogently reasoned text. Monani’s approach to Indigenous cinema is situated within multiple critical conversations while maintaining a clear and consistent original intervention. She engages cinema from a variety of angles, not limiting herself to the ‘text’ of the film itself, but also considering the filmmakers’ contexts as well as the influence of the venue and audience participating in the screening. I found this study to be compelling and exciting.” — Amy Hamilton, author of <i>Peregrinations: Walking in American Literature</i><br /><br /> “A much-needed addition to the fast-growing fields of Indigenous media and ecocinema studies. Well-written, with both substantive theoretical heft and, at the same time, a warm and inviting tone and a very readable style, the arguments Monani makes around issues of place, time, and affect comprise a compelling case for the centrality of Indigenous cinematic mediations of ecological consciousness.” —Joanna Hearne, author of <i>Native Recognition: Indigenous Cinema and the Western</i> and <i>Smoke Signals: Native Cinema Rising </i>
This absorbing text is the first book-length exploration foregrounding the environmental dimensions of cinema made by Indigenous peoples, including a particularly fascinating discussion on how Indigenous cinema’s ecological entanglements are a crucial and complementary aspect of its agenda of decolonialism.
List of Tables
Preface
Land Acknowledgments
A Glossary Clarifying the Use of Terms
Introducing D-Ecocinema
Introduction
1. D-ecocinema Criticism: Reclaiming Indigenous Eco-Agency
2. (Re)rooting Indigenous Place: The ImagineNATIVE Film and Media Festival
3. (Re)growing The World: imagineNATIVE as In-Person and Remote Festival
4. Timely Interventions: Indigenous Cinema Time(s)
5. Snipping and Glitching Colonial Time: The Films of Terril Calder and Caroline Monnet
6. Indigenous Affects: Cinematic Humor’s Earthly Embodiments
7. Laughter to Breathe: The Films of Zoe Hopkins and Shelley Niro
Epilogue
Acknowledgments
Bibliography
Primary Filmography
Artist websites