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Picnic at Hanging Rock

Picnic at Hanging Rock - Paperback

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Availability:In StockContributor:Anna Backman RogersSeries:BFI Film ClassicsPublish date:2022-10-20Pages:104
Language:EnglishPublisher:British Film InstituteISBN-13:9781839023354ISBN-10:183902335XUPC:9781839023354Book Category:Performing ArtsBook Subcategory:FilmBook Topic:History & CriticismSize:7.46 x 5.36 x 0.21 inchesWeight:0.3594Product ID:SCWMDY1NEV

Peter Weir's haunting and allusive Picnic at Hanging Rock (1975), set in 1900, tells the story of the mysterious disappearance of three schoolgirls and their teacher on a trip to a local geological formation. The film is widely hailed as a classic of new Australian cinema, seen as exemplary of a peculiarly Australian style of heritage filmmaking.

Anna Backman Rogers' study considers Picnic from feminist, psychoanalytic and decolonialising perspectives, exploring its setting in a colonised Australian bushland in which the Aboriginal people are a spectral presence in a landscape stolen from them in pursuit of the white man's 'terra nullius'. She delves into the film's production history, addressing director Weir's influences and preoccupations at the time of its making, its reception and its lasting impact on visual culture more broadly. Rogers addresses the film's treatment of the young schoolgirls and their teachers, seemingly, as embodiments of an archetype of the 'eternal feminine', as objects of the male gaze, and in terms of ideas about female hysteria as a protest against gender norms. She argues that Picnic is, in fact, highly subversive: a film that requires its viewers to read its seductive surfaces against the grain of the image in order to uncover its psychological depths.
Language:EnglishPublisher:British Film InstituteISBN-13:9781839023354ISBN-10:183902335XUPC:9781839023354Book Category:Performing ArtsBook Subcategory:FilmBook Topic:History & CriticismSize:7.46 x 5.36 x 0.21 inchesWeight:0.3594Product ID:SCWMDY1NEV
Anna Backman Rogers is Professor of Aesthetics, Culture and Feminist Theory at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden. She is the author of American Independent Cinema: Rites of Passage and The Crisis-Image (2015), Sofia Coppola: The Politics of Visual Pleasure (2019), and Still Life: Notes on Barbara Loden's Wanda (2020). She is also the co-editor of three books on feminism and visual culture with Laura Mulvey and Boel Ulfsdotter. She is the founder and editor-in-chief of Mai: Feminism and Visual Culture.
Publisher: British Film Institute

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