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Moyra Davey: I Confess

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  • Various authors

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  • 168 pages
  • 6 hours of reading

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Over the last forty years, Moyra Davey?s work in photography, film, and text presents a wide-ranging model of engagement with the world: reflections on producing and consuming, on writing and reading, and on novelty and obsolescence. Based on Davey?s eponymous 2019 film of the same title, 'i confess' triangulates the lives and work of three writers: the American novelist and essayist James Baldwin, the Québécois revolutionary Pierre Vallières, and Ottawa-based political philosopher Dalie Giroux. With Baldwin?s 1962 novel Another Country as its point of departure, the narrative arrives at the work of each figure in succession, threading themes of race and poverty, language, and nationalism into Davey?s personal chronicle of the 1960s and 1970s;a turbulent period of Québécois history marked by separatism and violence, unresolved to this day.00Exhibition: National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, Canada (24.04. -07.09.2020).

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Moyra Davey: I Confess, Various authors

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Released
2020
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Title
Moyra Davey: I Confess
Language
English
Released
2020
Format
Paperback
Pages
168
ISBN10
0888849966
ISBN13
9780888849960
Series
Rating
4.65 out of 5
Description
Over the last forty years, Moyra Davey?s work in photography, film, and text presents a wide-ranging model of engagement with the world: reflections on producing and consuming, on writing and reading, and on novelty and obsolescence. Based on Davey?s eponymous 2019 film of the same title, 'i confess' triangulates the lives and work of three writers: the American novelist and essayist James Baldwin, the Québécois revolutionary Pierre Vallières, and Ottawa-based political philosopher Dalie Giroux. With Baldwin?s 1962 novel Another Country as its point of departure, the narrative arrives at the work of each figure in succession, threading themes of race and poverty, language, and nationalism into Davey?s personal chronicle of the 1960s and 1970s;a turbulent period of Québécois history marked by separatism and violence, unresolved to this day.00Exhibition: National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, Canada (24.04. -07.09.2020).