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Outside Looking In

Viewing First Nations Peoples in Canadian Dramatic Television Series

Mary Jane Miller

Canadians’ changing perceptions of First Nations people as reflected in television series like Beachcombers and North of 60.


Paper (0773533672) 9780773533677
Release date: 2008-06-09
CA $32.95  |  US $32.95
Order by mail / fax : Order form


Cloth (0773533664) 9780773533660
Release date: 2008-06-09
CA $95.00  |  US $95.00
Order by mail / fax : Order form


6 x 9
504pp
20 b&w photos


Table of Contents

Widely sold abroad, Beachcombers and North of 60 are what many international audiences know about Canada. In Outside Looking In Mary Jane Miller traces the evolution of representations of First Nations people in fifty years of Canadian television broadcasts.

Using recent scholarship in ethnography and popular culture, Miller throws light on both what these series present and what is missing, how various long-standing issues are raised and framed differently over time, and what new issues appear. She looks at narrative arc, characterization, dialogue, and theme as well as how inflections of familiar genres like family adventure, soap opera, situation comedy, and legal drama shape both the series and viewers' expectations. Miller discusses Radisson, Forest Rangers and other children's series in the 1960s and early 1970s, as well as Beachcombers, Spirit Bay, The Rez, and North of 60 - series whose complex characters created rewarding relationships while dealing with issues ranging from addiction to unemployment to the aftermath of the residential school system.

Outside Looking In addresses the need of the non-Native society that created these programs to know what it has told itself about the culture of its first peoples. It presents a vital descriptive record of material in danger of slipping from the public consciousness - or from the national archives (as is the case with Radisson) - and provides a much-needed historical perspective for more recent aboriginal television drama and that which will be created in the future."

Review quotes
"An extremely important addition to the literature on television and First Nations people, that will appeal to the general reader - especially the rather large group of North of 60 fans." John Jackson, professor emeritus & research fellow, Centre for Broadcasting Studies, Concordia University


Mary Jane Miller is Professor Emerita at Brock University and author of Rewind and Search: conversations with the makers and decision makers of CBC television drama (1996).

 BY THE SAME AUTHOR

Mary Jane Miller
Cloth 9780773513655

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The AAUP has compiled a bibliography of books from university presses that shed light on some of the issues surrounding recent events.