Description
This book investigates how big budget filmmaking has come to adopt supply chain practices, with a specific focus on how higher education produces workers compliant with that system.
About the Author
Kay Dickinson is Senior Lecturer in the School of Culture and Creative Arts at Glasgow University, UK. She is the author of Arab Film and Video Manifestos: Forty-Five Years of the Moving Image Amid Revolution (2018), Arab Cinema Travels: Transnational Syria, Palestine, Dubai and Beyond (British Film Institute, 2016), and Off Key: When Film and Music Won't Work Together (2008).
Reviews
Supply Chain Cinema is a critical reconceptualization of blockbuster film production and a scathing indictment of the ways in which higher education and skills training schemes have become complicit in producing a workforce amendable to demands of global capital. This is essential reading and a cautionary tale that troubles how governments and universities are responding to the creative economy. -- Kevin Sanson, Queensland University of Technology, Australia
Supply Chain Cinema is a vital contribution, arguing persuasively that global film production can now best be understood via supply chain logistics, with all the 'just-in-time' dynamics of inequity and extraction that this entails. Taking us on a journey to both the UK and the UAE, Dickinson foregrounds the voices and experiences of current and future film workers as they are swept up, trained up and then compelled to navigate the vagaries of the creative supply chain. -- Bridget Conor, University of Auckland, New Zealand
Book Information
ISBN 9781839024627
Author Kay Dickinson
Format Hardback
Page Count 184
Imprint BFI Publishing
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Series International Screen Industries
Details
Subtitle: |
Producing Global Film Workers |
Series: |
International Screen Industries |