1st Edition

Intermedial Art Practices as Cultural Resilience

Edited By Lindsay Blair, Camille Manfredi Copyright 2025
204 Pages 10 Color & 22 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

204 Pages 10 Color & 22 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

204 Pages 10 Color & 22 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This innovative collection of essays is focused on the idea of transmedialization: the ways that the traditional forms of the predominantly oral cultures of Scotland and Brittany (poetry, song and story) can be transformed by the use of hybrid forms and new digital technologies.   The volume invites readers from a range of disciplines – music, art, literature, history, cultural memory... Read more

Contents

 

List of Figures

List of Contributors

Acknowledgements

 

1. Introduction

Lindsay Blair and Camille Manfredi

 

Part 1: Film-Poetry and Cultural Resilience

 

2. In Praise of Peripheral Vision: Films about Poetry and Poems about Film

Alan Riach

 

3. Voice and Identifying New Diegetic and Dialogic Frameworks in the Poetry Film

Sarah Tremlett

 

4. Film and Identity: Hugh MacDiarmid: A Portrait (Margaret Tait, 1964)

Camilla Peters

 

5. Borders and Lines of Fracture: John Burnside, Roseanne Watt and Havergey

Marie-Odile Pittin-Hédon

 

Part 2: Spaces, Places, History and Politics and Intermedial Practice

 

6. The Moving and the Static: Radical Re-imaginings in the Works of Daniel Reeves and Helen MacAlister

Lindsay Blair

 

7. “the lightest membrane between you and the landscape”: Thomas A Clark’s Practice and Film Poems”

Monika Szuba

 

8. Post-naturalist Figurative Strategies in Breton-language Public Television Documentaries: the Case of Plijadur an Ijin by Mikael Baudu

Catherine Conan

 

9. The Representation of St Kilda in Contemporary Creative Works in Literature in French and in Art

Philippe Laplace

 

10. The National Theatre of Scotland and Multimediality: Lament for Sheku Bayoh (2020) and How The Earth Must See Itself (2020)

Jeanne Schaaf

 

Part 3: Sonorous Landscapes

 

11. Musical Settings as Cultural Weapons: Some Archipelagic Thoughts

John Purser

 

12. Yann Madec and Pierre Stéphan’s Diafonik: Across Matter, Contexts and Time

Nelly Blanchard

 

13. Eternal Surging: Consciousness and the Sonorous Gaelic Landscape

Norman Shaw

 

Index

Biography

Lindsay Blair is Associate Professor of Visual Studies and Cultural Theory at the University of the Highlands and Islands. She is the Principal Investigator of the “Hands Across the Sea” project (https://handsacrosstheseacom.wordpress.com/). Blair’s previous work on word-image and the film poem resulted in a monograph on the American Surrealist, Joseph Cornell, entitled Joseph Cornell’s Vision of Spiritual Order. Blair was then engaged by the BBC as Associate Producer for an Omnibus Documentary, Joseph Cornell: Worlds in a Box. Her recent research which has focused on word and image in the art of the Highlands and Islands of Scotland has been described as “a re- assessment of the tired narratives of Highland visual culture, shifting understanding to more international and contemporary discourses”. Examples of published outputs include: “Dalriada, the Lordship of the Isles and the Northern Rim: De-centralising the Visual Culture of the Highlands and Islands of Scotland”, Narratives Unfolding: National Art Histories in an Unfinished World (2017),  ‘”Mutations from Below”: The Land Raiders of Reef and An Suileachan by Will Maclean and Marian Leven’, Northern Scotland (2020) and “The Photographs of A.B. Ovenstone and the Re-Invention of the Scottish Amateur Tradition”, The Journal of Victorian Culture (2023).

 

Camille Manfredi is Professor of Scottish literature and visual arts at the University of Brest in Western Brittany. Her published work includes the monographs Alasdair Gray: le faiseur d’Ecosse (2012) and Nature and Space in Contemporary Scottish Writing and Art (2019), as well as the edited volumes Alasdair Gray: Ink for Worlds (2014) and Brittany-Scotland: Contacts, Transfers and Dissonances (2017), with Michel Byrne. She is the co-editor, with Marie-Odile Pittin-Hedon and Scott Hames, of Scottish Writing After Devolution: Edges of the New (2022) in which she contributed a chapter on “Scottish Audio- and Film-Poetry: Writing, Sounding, Imaging Twenty-First-Century Scotland”. She is the Co-investigator of the “Hands Across the Sea” project.