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isbn 978 90 5356 750 0
16 x 24 cm, 224 pages,
paperback, 2005
English
€ 32,25

Film Studies/Visual Media
Patricia Pisters, Wim Staat
Shooting the Family
Transnational Media and Intercultural Values

Do contemporary movements of migration and the ever-increasing abundance of audiovisual media correspond to - or even cause - shifts in the defenition of both the bourgeois nuclear family and the tribal extended family? In Shooting the Family, twelve authors investigate the transfigured role of the family in a transnational world in which intercultural values are negotiated through mass media like film and television, as well as through particularistic media like home movies and videos.
"Shooting the Family" has a double meaning. On the one hand, this book claims that the family is under pressure from the forces of globalization and migration; it is the family that risks being shot to pieces. On the other hand, family matters of all kinds, including family values, are increasingly being constructed and refigured in a mediated form. The audiovisual family has become an important medium for intercultural affairs - this is a family that is being re-established as a place of security and comfort in times of upheaval; it is the family shot by cameras that register and simultaneously create new family values.

Patricia Pisters is Professor of Film Studies at the University of Amsterdam.
Wim Staat is Assistent Professor of Film Studies at the Media Studies Department of the University of Amsterdam.

Other titles by these authors:
Lessen van Hitchcock, herziene editie
Micropolitics of Media Culture
Mind the Screen
Opereren in de werkelijkheid