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'Defying the odds at every turn, Gillian Armstrong's sustained career over four decades has inspired two generations of women to take up filmmaking. In this timely book, Julia Erhart draws on four decades of feminist film critique to illuminate for a new generation the body of experimental, realist, biographical, documentary and period films directed by Armstrong. Erhart's knowledge of and passion for Armstrong's cinema makes compelling reading.'
Felicity Collins, La Trobe University
A commercially successful Australian director of over eighteen feature films and documentaries, including My Brilliant Career (1979), Gillian Armstrong is an early, notable example of a woman director connecting with mass audiences. Armstrong's films are unique in their aesthetic expression and in the ethical relationships that they depict, framed through the language of gender inclusivity and due in part to her foregrounding of original, complex and nuanced female characters. This important book fills a gap in the literature on women screen practitioners and is a long overdue response to demands for new insight into the work of this significant director.
Julia Erhart is Associate Professor in Screen Studies at Flinders University.
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edinburghuniversitypress.com
ISBN 978-1-4744-4051-6
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List of contents
Introduction
1. An authorial cinema
2. A popular, commercial cinema:
Mrs. Soffel,
Little Women,
Charlotte Gray,
Death Defying Acts
3. An Australian genre cinema:
My Brilliant Career,
Oscar and Lucinda,
Starstruck
4. A sensual cinema:
Last Days of Chez Nous,
Unfolding Florence: The Many Lives of Florence Broadhurst,
Women He's Undressed
5. An ethical cinema:
High Tide and
The Story of Kerry, Josie and Diana
Conclusion: A collaborative cinema
About the author
Julia Erhart is Associate Professor in Screen and Media Studies at Flinders University.
Summary
This important book fills a gap in the literature on women screen practitioners and is a long overdue response to demands for new insight into the work of Gillian Armstrong.