Recherche

Résultats de recherche

UBC cIRcle Translation missing: fr.blacklight.search.logo
McIlroy, Brian; Lester, Peter; Tabbarraee, Babak; Inouye, Shaun; Clerici, Nathen; Ferguson, Joshua; Evans, Christine; Burgess, Diane 2013-10-17 This SSHRC funded project (Council Grant number 430-2011-006) set out as its goal to advance our knowledge of the character of film exhibition in the early part of the 20th century in Vancouver, with a specific focus on 1914 as a case study. Dr. Peter Lester researched the majority of the theatre data. Graduate Students Babak Tabbarraee, Shaun Inouye, Nathen Clerici, Joshua Ferguson, and Dr. Christine Evans, and Dr. Diane Burgess have contributed to these data and contextual matters. The following dataset is one the of three surrounding 1914 exhibition history in Vancouver. In this dataset, the four main newspapers that published in Vancouver at this time –The Province, The Vancouver Sun, The Vancouver Daily World, and The Vancouver News-Advertiser were scanned for advertisements and notices of film screenings. We discovered that only a small number of theatres did advertise films compared to the theatre list found on the maps which can be found in cIRcle http://hdl.handle.net/2429/45267. The second dataset, a comparison of 1914 film listings in Vancouver, Seattle and Winnipeg is located in the "Screens in Vancouver: Cinemagoing and the City in 1914" collection in cIRcle. A comparison with Toronto and Montreal will follow in early 2014. Arts, Faculty of Theatre and Film, Department of Unreviewed Faculty Postdoctoral Graduate http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
UBC cIRcle Translation missing: fr.blacklight.search.logo
McIlroy, Brian; Lester, Peter; Tabbarraee, Ba; Inouye, Shaun; Clerici, Nathen; Ferguson, Joshua; Evans, Christine; Burgess, Diane 2013-10-21 This SSHRC funded project (Council Grant number 430-2011-006) set out as its goal to advance our knowledge of the character of film exhibition in the early part of the 20th century in Vancouver, with a specific focus on 1914 as a case study. Dr. Peter Lester researched the majority of the theatre data. Graduate Students Babak Tabbarraee, Shaun Inouye, Nathen Clerici, Joshua Ferguson, and Dr. Christine Evans, and Dr. Diane Burgess have contributed to these data and contextual matters. The following dataset is the second of three surrounding 1914 exhibition history in Vancouver. The first dataset in the "Screens in Vancouver: Cinemagoing and the City in 1914" collection in cIRcle is a record of film listings for Vancouver by cinema and newspaper for each month of 1914. The first dataset was then compared with the main newspapers in Seattle and Winnipeg to see what overlap in films there was, and whether empirically proven statements could be made about the distribution of films in 1914. The main conclusion is that very few films overlapped, and thus the cinematic experience in 1914 was largely unique to each city. The following dataset is a record of the comparison across Vancouver, Seattle and Winnipeg. A legend for abbreviated cinema names in the three cities is also included. A third and final dataset to be released in 2014 compares film listings in Toronto and Montreal. Arts, Faculty of Theatre and Film, Department of Unreviewed Faculty Postdoctoral Graduate http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
UBC cIRcle Translation missing: fr.blacklight.search.logo
McIlroy, Brian; Lester, Peter; Birks, Chelsea 2014-09-08 This SSHRC funded project (Council Grant number 430-2011-006) set out as its goal to advance our knowledge of the character of film exhibition in the early part of the 20th century in Vancouver, with a specific focus on 1914 as a case study. The following dataset is the third of three surrounding 1914 exhibition history in Vancouver. The first dataset in the "Screens in Vancouver: Cinemagoing and the City in 1914" collection in cIRcle is a record of film listings for Vancouver by cinema and newspaper for each month of 1914. The second dataset compared Vancouver’s film exhibition with Seattle and Winnipeg to see what percentage of overlap in films occurred, and whether empirically proven statements could be made about the distribution of films in 1914. The main conclusion is that very few films overlapped, and thus the cinematic experience in 1914 was largely unique to each city. The following third dataset is a record of the comparison across Vancouver, Toronto and Montreal. A legend for abbreviated cinema names in the three cities is also included. The majority of the theatre data was compiled by UBC MA Film Studies graduate Chelsea Birks, with work earlier compiled by Dr. Peter Lester. This study, though it does not claim to be comprehensive, particularly in relation to Toronto, confirms the conclusion from the second data set, which is that very few films overlapped, and thus the cinematic experience in 1914 was largely unique to each city. Arts, Faculty of Theatre and Film, Department of Unreviewed Faculty Postdoctoral Graduate http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.5/ca/

Instructions pour la recherche cartographique

1.Activez le filtre cartographique en cliquant sur le bouton « Limiter à la zone sur la carte ».
2.Déplacez la carte pour afficher la zone qui vous intéresse. Maintenez la touche Maj enfoncée et cliquez pour encadrer une zone spécifique à agrandir sur la carte. Les résultats de la recherche changeront à mesure que vous déplacerez la carte.
3.Pour voir les détails d’un emplacement, vous pouvez cliquer soit sur un élément dans les résultats de recherche, soit sur l’épingle d’un emplacement sur la carte et sur le lien associé au titre.
Remarque : Les groupes servent à donner un aperçu visuel de l’emplacement des données. Puisqu’un maximum de 50 emplacements peut s’afficher sur la carte, il est possible que vous n’obteniez pas un portrait exact du nombre total de résultats de recherche.