Sweet Suburbia and the Bustling City

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DOI:

https://doi.org/10.26686/jnzs.v0iNS30.6498

Abstract

This paper focuses on the representation of Wellington in New Zealand tourism films in the decades preceding the establishment of the National Film Unit (NFU) in 1941. While critically engaging with current discourses about early New Zealand film production, New Zealand film history, New Zealand human geography and the cinematic city, it performs the textual analysis of eight case studies also examining archival materials related to their production, circulation and reception. This article aims to demonstrate how the cinematic depiction of New Zealand’s capital city in the analysed time frame was a complex and multi-layered process driven and characterised by the coexistence and intertwining of tourism marketing, national publicity and colonial agenda.

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Author Biography

Diego Bonelli, Victoria University of Wellington - Te Herenga Waka

Diego Bonelli completed a MA in History at Università degli Studi di Parma, Italy, a MA in Art and Culture Management at Trentino School of Management, Italy and a PhD in Film at Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand. He currently works in the Film Programme at Victoria University of Wellington. His current academic interests include tourism film and documentary production in New Zealand, with a specific focus on the representation of New Zealand cities. He published Selling the Creative City: Wellington Tourism Film in the Neoliberal in Studies in Australasian Cinema and A Wonderful Advertisement for Our Country: New Zealand Tourism Film Dynamics of Circulation 1923-1989 in the Journal of Tourism History.

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Published

2020-06-12 — Updated on 2021-06-28

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