Colonial Reels: Histories and Afterlives of Colonial Film Collections
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Bristol
Department Name: School of Arts
Abstract
From the beginnings of cinema in 1895, film cameras accompanied excursions into colonial worlds and recorded the activities of colonial officers, missionaries, anthropologists and various personnel such as doctors, nurses, teachers, engineers, and their families. The role of film in the making of empire has only recently been gaining traction in film history. Whilst official film histories have been most prevalent, unofficial film production has had less attention. 'Colonial Reels: Histories and Afterlives of Colonial Film Collections' overturns this trajectory by focusing on the colonial film collections in four unique archives, the British Empire and Commonwealth Collection, the British Film Institute, Royal Anthropological Institute and Wellcome Collection. The project is a collaboration between three scholars, who are specialists in the field and have worked together in a research network for several years.
The research will cover the period from 1920 up to 1980, by which time many British colonies had gained independence. The project will analyse colonial film held in the four archives in relation to the historical contexts of the countries and locales where they were produced. We will explore the infrastructures, networks and technologies that their production drew upon and the means by which they circulated. We will expand the production histories and contexts of films, identifying the people involved in their making and their positions in colonial offices or other colonial enterprises. The project is especially interested in the representations of colonialism that the films in these collections embody, particularly in relation to race, gender, ethnicity, and culture. The project will achieve an in-depth view of the films held in each collection that will extend knowledge and understanding of film and its role in the making of the British empire.
There are increasing calls for access to imperial archives and the project will participate in, and organise, events providing forums for debate about decolonisation, reparation and restitution, particularly in relation to colonial film archives. The project aims to create a record of the perspectives of contemporary filmmakers and visual artists working critically with colonial films, who seek to access the histories of colonialism embedded within their imagery. To this end, the project also focuses on questions of archive, particularly as it pertains to histories of colonial film holdings and how archives matter both historically and in relation to the world in which we live. The project will run two symposiums, at Centre for Developing Societies, New Delhi, India and at the University of Cape Town, South Africa and will culminate with an international conference and gallery exhibitions, at Birkbeck, University of London, and Wellcome Centre, where films drawn from the archival collections as well as short films produced within the project will be screened. Under the auspices of the Afrika Eye Film Festival, Bristol, the project will offer educational workshops. Other dissemination plans include a website, a co-authored monograph, an edited collection of conference papers, the publication of journal articles, and short films using film footage from the collections.
This project will open up the colonial film collections of four partner archives and will extend discussion and debate across academic communities of film and history, other groups of scholars such as medical historians and anthropologists, and contemporary filmmakers and visual artists, as well as a wider public. It creates a unique opportunity to delve deeply into four colonial film collections created in the British empire, when film became a powerful means of official and unofficial record that is yet to have wider focus in histories of British cinema. It is this gap to which this project seeks to respond.
The research will cover the period from 1920 up to 1980, by which time many British colonies had gained independence. The project will analyse colonial film held in the four archives in relation to the historical contexts of the countries and locales where they were produced. We will explore the infrastructures, networks and technologies that their production drew upon and the means by which they circulated. We will expand the production histories and contexts of films, identifying the people involved in their making and their positions in colonial offices or other colonial enterprises. The project is especially interested in the representations of colonialism that the films in these collections embody, particularly in relation to race, gender, ethnicity, and culture. The project will achieve an in-depth view of the films held in each collection that will extend knowledge and understanding of film and its role in the making of the British empire.
There are increasing calls for access to imperial archives and the project will participate in, and organise, events providing forums for debate about decolonisation, reparation and restitution, particularly in relation to colonial film archives. The project aims to create a record of the perspectives of contemporary filmmakers and visual artists working critically with colonial films, who seek to access the histories of colonialism embedded within their imagery. To this end, the project also focuses on questions of archive, particularly as it pertains to histories of colonial film holdings and how archives matter both historically and in relation to the world in which we live. The project will run two symposiums, at Centre for Developing Societies, New Delhi, India and at the University of Cape Town, South Africa and will culminate with an international conference and gallery exhibitions, at Birkbeck, University of London, and Wellcome Centre, where films drawn from the archival collections as well as short films produced within the project will be screened. Under the auspices of the Afrika Eye Film Festival, Bristol, the project will offer educational workshops. Other dissemination plans include a website, a co-authored monograph, an edited collection of conference papers, the publication of journal articles, and short films using film footage from the collections.
This project will open up the colonial film collections of four partner archives and will extend discussion and debate across academic communities of film and history, other groups of scholars such as medical historians and anthropologists, and contemporary filmmakers and visual artists, as well as a wider public. It creates a unique opportunity to delve deeply into four colonial film collections created in the British empire, when film became a powerful means of official and unofficial record that is yet to have wider focus in histories of British cinema. It is this gap to which this project seeks to respond.
Publications
Sandon E
(2024)
"Mining" the Film Archive: South Africa's Mining Industry and Film Production
in Media+Environment
Foya N
(2024)
Collaborative cultures: Ubuntu as a pedagogical foundation for educating independent film-makers
in Film Education Journal
| Description | Film Screening Events with Afrika Eye Festival |
| Organisation | Afrika Eye Community Interest Trust |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Sector | Charity/Non Profit |
| PI Contribution | I work voluntarily and collaboratively with Afrika Eye Festival as a co-Director - the work is mutually beneficial. I bring expert knowledge and understanding of African film and history, organising and fundraising skills and abilities, and a wide network of relevant contacts for event panels. My contributions to events in 2024: 1. Organising the screening of a restored anti-apartheid film, Mapantsula (1988), at Watershed Media Centre, Bristol to mark the 30th anniversary of South African Freedom Day, 27 April 2024. This involved seeking funding from the Centre for Black Humanities, University of Bristol, to cover basic costs of the film director's travel from Germany, and his accommodation and subsistence. I chaired the event, the director provided an introduction; after the screening he and I ran a Q&A. 2. Finding English-dubbed DVD, organising screening, and negotiating license fee of animated film Zarafa (2012), a French-Belgian animated film set in Africa, for children's community-based screening during the October 2024 school half-term. 3. Organising screenings, and negotiating license fees, for two films at Afrika Eye Festival, Watershed, Bristol, 16 November, 2024: a) Soundtrack to a Coup d'Etat (Grimonprez, 2024) - chaired the event, organised two University of Bristol speakers (films studies; history), ran a Q&A /discussion. b) Preview screening of On Becoming a Guinea Fowl (Nyoni, 2024). |
| Collaborator Contribution | Afrika Eye is a CIC, and brings the benefits of an established company and organisational and creative programming skills to this collaboration that is mutually beneficial. |
| Impact | The collaboration creates screening events in public venues, focused on developing audiences of all ages interested in African/panAfrican film. |
| Start Year | 2016 |
| Description | Field trip - National Archives, Kew + Wellcome Collection, January 2025 |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | National |
| Primary Audience | Professional Practitioners |
| Results and Impact | Archival visits, in London with the 'Colonial Reels' project archivist: 1. A visit to the National Archives in Kew, to meet the Records Specialist Empire and Commonwealth. The primary purpose was to explain the project and its remit and to gain knowledge and understanding of the archives at Kew, the cataloguing and relevant working systems, and the materials relevant to the research project, particularly those adjunctive to the colonial films we are researching. 2. A visit to the Wellcome Collection, to meet the Senior Archivist with whom the project is working, in order to discuss and work through the protocols for accessing the films, as well as visit the vaults where films are held, and to generally understand better how the Wellcome Collection operates. The visit included viewing an exhibition on display 'Hard Graft'. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2025 |
| URL | https://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk |
| Description | Keynote address - at UKRI-HEIF funded event facilitated by Developing a Media Decolonisation Imaginary (DMDI), Bournemouth University |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Other audiences |
| Results and Impact | I presented the keynote address at this event - my address was entitled: "Art, Film, interventions: Traumatic Memory and 'Potential History'". The audience was both in-person (Bournemouth University) and online (zoom and YouTube). There was a discussion and Q&A (reflecting the audiences listed above). Several individuals have continued communications following the event and will participate in and contribute to the wider network of the 'Colonial Reels' research project. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2024 |
| URL | https://www.bournemouth.ac.uk/events/artist-public-intellectual |
| Description | Project field trip and workshop - Film Africa (festival, London), October 2024 |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Other audiences |
| Results and Impact | The project team attended film screenings and presentations; films were primarily in the subject area of the 'Colonial Reels' research project; also met and had discussions with filmmakers from Africa and the African diaspora and had discussions with audience members. This increased knowledge and understanding of the 'Colonial Reels' research project. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2024 |
| URL | https://www.filmafrica.org |
| Description | Response to 'Three Questions', an initiative published in online newsletter of University of Bristol, Strategic Research Institute, 'Migration Mobilities Bristol' |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | Engagement focused website, blog or social media channel |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Other audiences |
| Results and Impact | Published online - my answers to Three Questions: 1. Can you tell us about a memorable journey you've done? 2.Can you share an insight or something you've learnt from an MMB event you've been to? 3. What are you reading/watching/listening to that you'd like to tell us about? (300 words in total) MMB created a webpage with the project summary (that is also on the UKRI-AHRC website) and included a still image from one of the film reels in the British Empire and Commonwealth Collection. The newsletter goes out to more than 700 people across the world. In general, it publicises the project very widely and provides a link to an engaging description + illustration of the project. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2024 |
| URL | https://migration.bristol.ac.uk/research/imagination-belonging-futures/colonial-reels-histories-and-... |
| Description | Visit - June Givanni PanAfrican Cinema Archive, January 2025 |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | National |
| Primary Audience | Professional Practitioners |
| Results and Impact | A meeting between the project PI, one of the Co-Is, and directors of the June Givanni PanAfrican Cinema Archive. The intended purpose was to discuss mutual interests and to plan a keynote panel that is to be jointly presented in July 2025 at the IAMHIST conference, Cape Town, South Africa. It was also an opportunity to see the archive, which I hadn't seen before, especially as it will be an important archive for the project's future research. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2025 |
| Description | Workshops (April and September, 2024) |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Other audiences |
| Results and Impact | Two project workshops held in April and September, 2024, aimed at discussing future plans and incorporating the views of members of our wider network through their participation. Impacts are primarily embedded in the ongoing project planning and research. Impacts for the audience involved are provision of knowledge and understanding about the project, its research work, research methodologies, planned outcomes, and future events. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2024 |
