Media releases

  • Top Canadian authors coming to Niagara for Two Days of Canada conference

    MEDIA ADVISORY: R00218 – 11 October 2016

    Award-winning authors from across Canada will be in downtown St. Catharines this week for the annual Two Days of Canada conference and the new Festival of Readers.

    Two Days of Canada is an annual conference hosted by Brock University’s Centre for Canadian Studies. The conference turns 30 this year, making it the longest-running Canadian Studies conference series in the country.

    This year’s theme is Concepts of Vancouver, which looks at Vancouver’s “unique confluence of art, politics, and cultural policy,” says Brock English professor Gregory Betts, who is a conference co-organizer. Brock PhD students Julia Polyck-O’Neill and Andrew McEwan, whose dissertations examine Vancouver’s arts and authors, are assisting in organizing the conference.

    More than 100 delegates from across Canada and around the world will listen to 40 presenters explore such topics as Indigenous rights in Vancouver and its region, that area’s unique openness to experimentation in the arts, and how Vancouver uses its class-consciousness to build inclusive urban communities.

    The conference and accompanying festival will feature authors who have won such prestigious awards as the Governor-General’s Award, the Griffin Prize and the Trillium Prize. Two poet laureates will also be in attendance.

    The keynote speaker for the event is George Bowering, the former Niagara resident who was Canada’s first Parliamentary Poet Laureate, and a two-time Governor-General’s Award winner. Since leaving Niagara, Bowering has lived mostly in Vancouver, where he has cultivated a world-class literary culture and become, as Betts says, “one of the giants of Canadian literature.”

    Authors Richard Cavell, Roy Miki, Lisa Robertson, Michael Turner and Rita Wong will also deliver plenary addresses.

    This year also sees the addition of the Festival of Readers to the conference, where award-winning authors will present their academic scholarship during conference sessions and share their literary work in the evenings.

    Festival of Readers events run from Thursday, Oct. 13 to Saturday, Oct. 15 and include a public lecture by Bowering, a poetry reading and poetry slam, and a story illustration workshop by Rodman Hall.

    Gary Barwin, who is on the 2016 Scotiabank Giller Prize shortlist, will be speaking at St. Catharines Public Library as part of the festival.

    There will also be a special screening of “Hard Core logo” at The Film House, with an introduction by the author Michael Turner.

    A complete guide can be found at http://www.festivalofreaders.com/the-festival-of-readers.

    Festival of Readers events are free and open to the public.

    Two Days of Canada: The Concept of Vancouver is being held at Brock University’s Marilyn I. Walker School of Fine and Performing Arts and the nearby Niagara Artists Centre visit the conference website for more information.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Dan Dakin, Media Relations Officer, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca, 905-688-5550 x5353 or 905-347-1970

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    Categories: Media releases

  • New indie film festival points the camera at Indigenous, Aboriginal themes

    MEDIA RELEASE: R00217 – 6 October 2016

    Independent filmmakers are being alerted to a new festival this fall that puts a spotlight on movies and videos that raise awareness of Aboriginal issues in Canada and around the world.

    The inaugural Nakoa Film Festival, a joint venture of the Weengushk Film Institute (WFI) and Brock University, will take place Nov 25-27 in downtown St. Catharines, Ont.

    Dozens of films of varying lengths and formats are to be screened at Brock’s Marilyn I. Walker School of Fine and Performing Arts and at the adjacent FirstOntario Performing Arts Centre.

    The festival welcomes submissions from Indigenous and non-Indigenous filmmakers from all countries, in the categories of short film, documentary or feature film. Submission deadline is October 10.

    Shirley Cheechoo, artistic director at WFI, said Nakoa was created to explore Indigenous topics while breaking down stereotypes and racial barriers.

    “Nakoa creates an important venue where emerging talents can be exposed to audiences, and where people can become educated about First Nations, Metis, and Inuit issues in Canada and around the world,” said Cheechoo.

    Scott Henderson, an associate professor of popular culture at Brock University and co-organizer of Nakoa, said film is a strong medium for communicating concepts and ideas to people from diverse backgrounds.

    “This festival is a terrific way to expose audiences not only to powerful art, but to different perspectives, Indigenous perspectives,” said Henderson.

    More information is contained in the Film Festival Guidelines or at the WFI website at weengushk.com
     

    For more information:

    • Stephanie Conkie, Marketing & Communications Officer, Weengushk Film Institute sconkie@weengushk.com 705-377-6011

    • Dan Dakin, Media Relations Officer, Brock University    
    ddakin@brocku.ca    905-688-5550 x5353

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    Categories: Media releases