Covering Niagara
Studies in Local Popular Culture
Häftad, Engelska, 2010
629 kr
Produktinformation
- Utgivningsdatum2010-05-30
- Mått152 x 229 x 25 mm
- Vikt810 g
- FormatHäftad
- SpråkEngelska
- SerieCultural Studies
- Antal sidor408
- FörlagWilfrid Laurier University Press
- ISBN9781554582211
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Joan Nicks is an adjunct professor in the Department of Communication, Popular Culture and Film at Brock University. She is co-editor with Jeannette Sloniowski of Slippery Pastimes: Reading the Popular in Canadian Culture (WLU Press, 2002). Her writing on film and popular culture has appeared in Candid Eyes: Essays on Canadian Documentaries (2003), Gendering the Nation: Canadian Women's Cinema (1999), Documenting the Documentary: Close Readings of Documentary Film and Video (1998), and various journals.Barry Keith Grant is a professor of film studies and popular culture at Brock University. He is the author or editor of twenty books, including 100 Documentary Films (with Jim Hillier, 2009), Auteurs and Authorship: A Film Reader (2007), Film Genre: Film Iconography to Ideology (2007), Film Genre Reader (2003) and The Dread of Difference: Gender and the Horror Film (1996), and his work has appeared in numerous journals and anthologies. He edits the Contemporary Approaches to Film and Television series for Wayne State University Press and the New Approaches to Film Genre series for Wiley Blackwell.
- Covering Niagara: Studies in Local Popular Culture, edited by Joan Nicks and Keith GrantMaps: Niagara Region, Niagara Urban Areas, Niagara Wine Route Foreword: Reflections on Everyday Life in Niagara Geoff PevereAcknowledgementsIntroductionPart I: Public ShowingsPolite Athletics and Bourgeois Gaieties: Toronto Society in Late Victorian Niagara-on-the-Lake Phillip Gordon MackintoshA Promise Set in Stone: St. Catharines Honours a Common Soldier Russell Johnston and Michael RipmeesterNiagara Falls Indian Village: Popular Productions of Cultural Difference Marian BredinPart II: Movies and MediaEarly Movie-Going in Niagara: From Itinerant Shows to Local Institutions, 1897-1910 Paul S. Moore""Hollywoodization,"" Gender and the Local Press in the 1920s: The Case of Niagara Falls, Ontario Jeannette Sloniowski and Joan Nicks Where Is the Local in Local Radio? The Changing Shape of Radio Programming in St. Catharines Laura Wiebe Taylor Part III: Food and DrinkFrolics with Food: The Frugal Housewife's Manual by ""A.B. of Grimsby"" Fiona Lucas and Mary F. Williamson""A Little More Than a Drink"": Public Drinking and Popular Entertainment in Post-Prohibition Niagara, 1927-1944 Dan Malleck Niagara's Emerging Wine Culture: From a Countryside of Production to Consumption Hugh GaylerPart IV: Local Connections""Kennying"": Kenny Wheeler and Local Jazz Terrance CoxThe Music Store as a Community Resource Nick Baxter-MooreBack to Our Roots: How Niagara Artists' Centre Became Popular Again Roslyn Costanzo Part V: Borderline MattersEntertaining Niagara Falls: Minstrel Shows, Theatres and Popular Pleasures Joan Nicks and Jeannette Sloniowski Electricity from Niagara Falls: Popularization of Modern Technology for Domestic Use Norman Ball Weaving Local Identity: The Niagara Region Tartan and the Invention of Tradition Greg Gillespie ContributorsIndexContributors' BiosNorman R. Ball is a historian of technology and Director of the Centre for Society, Technology and Values, Faculty of Engineering, University of Waterloo. He is author of The Canadian Niagara Power Company Story (2005) and is writing a history of the Niagara Parks Commission, to mark the occasion of its 125th anniversary in 2010. His wide work experience includes archivist, museum curator, and engineering magazine columnist.Nick Baxter-Moore is Associate Professor in the Department of Communication, Popular Culture and Film at Brock University. His current research interests include the touring strategies of the Trans Siberian Orchestra, the concert-going habits of Bruce Springsteen fans, and the history of Crystal Beach amusement park.Marian Bredin is Associate Professor in the Department of Communication, Popular Culture and Film at Brock University. Her research interests include Aboriginal and indigenous media, communications policy and cultural politics, and Canadian television. She is co-editor of two forthcoming collections: Indigenous Screen Cultures and Canadian Television: Text and Context.Roslyn Costanzo resides in Toronto and is active in the contemporary art scene and the Niagara Artists Centre (NAC), located in downtown St. Catharines. Her research interests are contemporary art and the emergence of artist-run culture in Canada between 1970 and 1980.Terrance Cox is a writer of poems and non-fiction and a ""general practitioner"" in the Humanities at Brock University. His published collections include a ""spoken word with music"" CD, Local Scores (2000), the prize-winning book Radio & Other Miracles (2001), and a second CD, Simultaneous Translation (2005). Hugh Gayler is Professor of Geography at Brock University. He specializes in urban geography and has published on various aspects of suburbanization and urban expansion into areas of high resource value. Greg Gillespie is Assistant Professor in the Department of Communication, Popular Culture and Film at Brock University. His research focuses on Scottish studies, sport studies, and game studies, and he is author of Hunting for Empire: Narratives of Sport in Rupert's Land, 1840-1870 (2008). He is from the town of Grimsby in the Niagara Region.Barry Keith Grant is Professor of Film Studies and Popular Culture at Brock University and co-editor of this volume. The author or editor of over a dozen books, his work has been widely published in journals and anthologies. He is the editor of film books for Wayne State University Press and Blackwell Publishing.Russell Johnston is Associate Professor in the Department of Communication, Popular Culture and Film at Brock University. His research on Canadian media history includes Selling Themselves: The Emergence of Canadian Advertising (2001), as well as articles in magazines, journals, and edited collections. Fiona Lucas, whose interest in Canadian culinary history began in 1987, is co-founder of the Culinary Historians of Ontario. Her first book, Hearth and Home: Women and the Art of Open Hearth Cooking, won silver in the 2007 Canadian Culinary Book Awards.Phillip Gordon Mackintosh is Associate Professor of Geography at Brock University. His SSHRC-funded research of historical-cultural and social geographies of class, gender, and race includes bourgeois, masculine performativity in nineteenth-century Masonic lodges and the domestic embourgeoisment of public space and racialized park planning in Edwardian Toronto.Dan Malleck is Assistant Professor in Community Health Sciences at Brock University and editor-in-chief of Social History of Alcohol and Drugs: An Interdisciplinary Journal. His research focus is the history of the regulation of alcohol and drugs, currently liquor regulation in public places in Ontario from 1927 to 1944.Paul S. Moore is Assistant Professor of Sociology, and in the Graduate Program in Communication and Culture at Ryerson University. He is the author of Now Playing: Early Moviegoing and the Regulation of Fun (2008) and several articles on the history of movie exhibition and promotion in Canada. With Sandra Gabriele, he is currently researching a history of the weekend newspaper in North America.Joan Nicks is Adjunct Professor in the Department of Communication, Popular Culture and Film at Brock University and is co-editor of this volume. Her writing on film and media has appeared in various edited anthologies and journals. She and colleague Jeannette Sloniowski have been long-time research collaborators and are co-editors of Slippery Pastimes: Reading the Popular in Canadian Culture (WLU Press, 2002). Geoff Pevere is a long-time broadcaster and film critic. He is co-author, with Greig Dymond, of Mondo Canuck: A Canadian Pop Culture Odyssey (1996).Michael Ripmeester is a cultural/historical geographer at Brock University. He has published in the areas of historical geographies of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Ontario, the ideological foundations of the lawn, and landscapes of public memory. His teaching focuses on power and resistance in the context of everyday landscapes.Jeannette Sloniowski is Assistant Professor in the Department of Communication, Popular Culture and Film at Brock University. She is co-editor of the TV Milestones series (Wayne State UP) and is completing a monograph on Jack Webb's Dragnet. Her work on film, television, and popular culture has appeared in various journals and edited books.Laura Wiebe Taylor is a Ph.D. Candidate in the Department of English and Cultural Studies at McMaster University, investigating intersections of popular culture, mass media, and interdisciplinary theory. She has published on film, popular music, and speculative fiction and spent twelve years in campus radio as a volunteer programmer.Mary F. Williamson is a culinary historian whose publications focus primarily on foods and cookery of the nineteenth century. She contributes regularly to Culinary Chronicles (Culinary Historians of Ontario). Before retiring as Fine Arts Bibliographer at York University, she authored studies of Canadian art publications and book and periodical illustration.
``Covering Niagara will finally bust loose a secret that's been all too well concealed from all too many people: because of its unique geographical position, as a kind of radar dish picking up influences from all compass points, both sides of the border and the myriad backgrounds of the millions who have settled there, it's a pop cultural torrent.'' -- Geoff Pevere, broadcaster, author, critic, and former Niagara resident -- 201005