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James Cullingham | |
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Born | Toronto, Ontario, Canada. | March 5, 1954
Alma mater | York University, Toronto (PhD) University of Toronto (MA) Trent University (BA) |
Occupations |
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Years active | 1983–present |
James Cullingham (born March 5, 1954) is a Canadian documentary filmmaker, historian, and journalist with Tamarack Productions, based in Nogojiwanong, Peterborough. [1] His documentaries primarily concern social justice, history, and popular culture. Cullingham was an executive producer with CBC Radio and has written for the Toronto Star , The Globe and Mail, and other publications.
Cullingham received his doctorate in Canadian and Latin American History from Toronto's York University in 2014.[ citation needed ] He was a coordinator of the journalism program and professor of journalism and English at Seneca University from 2002–2018. He is an adjunct graduate faculty member in Canadian Studies and Indigenous Studies and the PhD program in Canadian Studies at Trent University. Cullingham is also an instructor at Trent's Chanie Wenjack School for Indigenous Studies.
In 1989, Cullingham formed Tamarack Productions to produce Canada's first national documentary series on Aboriginal issues, featuring the work of Indigenous and non-Indigenous filmmakers. Since then, Cullingham has made documentaries in Canada, the United States, Europe, Africa, the Middle East, and Pakistan.
Cullingham has a doctorate in history specializing in Canadian and Latin American History from York University in Toronto.
In January 2022, Cullingham released his transnational work of history, "Two Dead White Men: Duncan Campbell Scott, Jacques Soustelle, and the Failure of Indigenous Policy". [2]
In addition to English, Cullingham speaks French fluently and has a working knowledge of Spanish.
Cullingham is a member of the Documentary Organization of Canada. He is a past national board member of the Canadian Association of Journalists.
Tamarack Productions is a media production company that Cullingham launched in 1989, releasing its first productions in 1991, As Long as the Rivers Flow, a 5-part documentary series on Aboriginal rights in Canada which has been broadcast and distributed globally in English and French (Tant que Coulent les Rivières). Since that time, Tamarack has made films in several countries on themes addressing history, politics, popular culture, and social justice.
In 2013, Tamarack released In Search of Blind Joe Death: The Saga of John Fahey, a documentary that follows the life and legacy of American guitarist, composer, writer and iconoclast John Fahey. The documentary was directed, produced, and executive produced by Cullingham. [3]
In 2018, Tamarack Productions released Jim Galloway - A Journey in Jazz, a documentary that chronicles the extraordinary career of the Scots-Canadian saxophonist, journalist, and impresario Jim Galloway (1936-2014.) Cullingham directed and produced the film, which had its world premiere at the 2018 Toronto Jazz Festival and its UK premiere at the 2019 Glasgow Film Festival.
In November 2021 Cullingham released the documentary film The Cost of Freedom - Refugee Journalists in Canada. [4] The film follows journalists Abdulrahman Matar from Syria, Luis Nájera from México, and Arzu Yildiz from Turkey, all of whom have fled their respective countries and are seeking to rebuild their lives as refugees in Canada.
Cullingham's career in Journalism began in 1983 as a producer, documentarian and line-up editor for Sunday Morning at CBC Radio. He was promoted in 1985 to Desk Producer, and was moved to Producer of Morningside for CBC Radio in 1986. That same year, he became Senior Producer of As It Happens (CBC Radio). In 1987, Cullingham moved to Executive Producer of As It Happens until 1989, when he returned to Sunday Morning (CBC Radio), becoming an Executive Producer until 1990.
In 1989, Cullingham created Tamarack Productions, and produced its first project, As Long As The Rivers Flow, in 1991. The television series focuses on Aboriginal rights in Canada, in both modern and historical times, and is broken up into five one-hour episodes - Flooding in Job's Garden, The Learning Path, Starting Fire with Gunpowder, Tikinagan, and Time Immemorial. The series brought together notable directors in this subject area in Canada including Hugh Brody, Gil Cardinal, Boyce Richardson and Loretta Todd. Peter Raymont of White Pine Pictures was the series Executive Producer.
Cullingham returned to CBC in 1997 to work as a Producer for Canada: A People's History where he stayed until 2000. He then moved to VisionTV Insight as a Supervising Producer and Story Editor.
In 2002, Cullingham began his career as a Broadcast-Journalism professor at Seneca College in Toronto, where he was the Journalism Program Coordinator from 2004 to 2011. Cullingham currently teaches documentary courses in the Journalism program, along with History and English in the Liberal Studies program.
Cullingham has done guest lectures and screenings at a number of universities including Concordia University, Queen's University, the University of Western Ontario, University of Toronto, York University, l’École normale supérieure and EFAP Images et médias in Paris. He conducts documentary master classes at EFAP annually.
Cullingham contributes frequently to publications including the Toronto Star , The Globe and Mail and the Journal of Wildlife Culture. [8] He began writing in 1984 for various publications such as Aboriginal Voices, Maclean’s, MOJO, NOW Magazine, Ontario Indian, Pollution Probe, Saturday Night and Bulletin of Latin American Studies.
His publications include articles concerning Aboriginal rights in Canada, Canadian politics, sports and a variety of others.
Cullingham was born and raised in Toronto, Ontario. As a youth he also resided in Florida and Switzerland where he completed his high school studies.
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