Diaspora Screen Media Network: Charting Glocal Imaginaries

Lead Research Organisation: Birmingham City University
Department Name: Research, Innovation & Enterprise

Abstract

The DSMN will explore how selected diaspora screen media texts including documentaries and short films engage with new media and the digital world of the internet to create new global forms of visual awareness considered as 'glocal imaginaries'. Building on recent work that traces the global mobilization of culture, the project will fill a gap in current research by using British Asian and Black British screen texts as case studies in identifying how 'glocal' formats of the new media align with or juxtapose national, regional or transnational perspectives of today's increasingly fluid visual culture (i.e. here routed through Birmingham and Northampton).
The network events will explore diaspora screen media texts' engagement with contemporary 'media ecologies' (Fuller 2005) in order to shape new understandings of the locatedness and mobility of diasporic audiences. It will provide an arena for dialogue between the educational sector, creative professionals and the general public including student groups and migrant communities with which participants have affiliations.
In defining 'glocal' imaginaries (e.g. in media examples and their distribution), the project will examine how the work of representative filmmakers, cultural practitioners and writers is viewed by the public who use social media, and together create an open reciprocal relationship that redefines and represents diaspora themes (e.g. cultural identity, relocation, cultural translation, home and belonging, religious beliefs and practices). Methodologically the network will articulate new cross-cutting debates on diasporic media cultures, address recent modes of access to diaspora screen media texts, and communication through social media. In identifying the changing landscape of film and online media production, reception, and promotion it asks:

1. How are diasporic screen media changing in terms of social impact through modification of themes and issues via interventions by new media?
2. Does new media's remapping of diasporic screen texts' traditional concerns encourage a more nuanced 'glocal imaginary' and how might this be defined?

The workshops and symposium will address through a specific research question (see CfS) elements of the interrelationship between diaspora cinema and new media ecologies implied by these two key research questions:

1. University of Northampton (UoN): 'Black British and British Asian Cinema and New Media' will focus on the current state of diaspora screen media texts and digital technologies used in production and reception. The changing circulation and consumption patterns of visual culture due to the impact of social media and digital technologies, will feature in discussions involving researchers and industry practitioners, film festival curators at the Errol Flynn Filmhouse (Northampton), FlatPack Film Festival and Midland Arts Centre (Birmingham), university students and the public.
2. Midlands Arts Centre (MAC), Birmingham: 'Social Networks and New Media' will examine the new media formats of diasporic screen media texts. Their changing role due to new media uses will be addressed by industry practitioners, film festival programmers, university students and early career researchers. Partners, e.g. Threshold Studios (Northampton), HOME (Manchester) and MACE (Lincoln), will be invited.
3. Birmingham City University (BCU): 'Globalising the Local in Diaspora Cinema and Media', a two-day symposium with invited speakers, film-makers, university students, members of public. Drawing on workshop findings, presentations will track new pathways to a glocal imaginary identified in the case studies associated with new media. Keynote speakers will be John Akomfrah, director of Handsworth Songs, and Vijay Mishra, author of Bollywood Cinema: Temples of Desire (2013) and Theorising the Diasporic Imaginary (2007). All network partners and stakeholders will be invited.
4. Events will be accompanied by screenings at venues.

Planned Impact

Impact generated by the use of digital technologies in producing and disseminating diasporic media culture will ensure the network's local, transnational and cross-generational reach. The project will collect, curate and publish digital content on case studies of Black British and British Asian film through its public website. This platform will facilitate the network's local and transnational impact by providing visitors with free access to multimedia, digital resources: e.g. podcasts of lectures; discussions and interviews filmed at the workshops; an annotated filmography of Black British and British Asian cinema; screening notes on screen media for undergraduates, researchers and interested members of the public. Building on the concept of 'digital diasporas' (Axel, 2004; Brinkerhoff, 2009; Everett, 2009), the platform will include an exhibition of Black British and British Asian film ephemera contributed by members of the public and local collections. It will combine official and unofficial archiving methods, and formal and informal practices of anthologising, to form an online resource of Black British and British Asian cinema and global media culture.

The project's website will feature an online viewing portal with a link to a YouTube channel, displaying short films on the network's activities. There is a working model of this on UONTV. http://uontv.uk/

The network's outreach and impact on the public, end-users and stakeholders will be generated through film showings and discussions at Birmingham's Midlands Arts Centre, and Northampton's Errol Flynn Filmhouse.

These events will coincide with the project's workshops and symposium consisting of academics, undergraduate and postgraduate student audiences, film practitioners, critics and archivists, organisations like Northamptonshire Rights and Equality Council, and Northamptonshire Borough Council's Diverse Communities Forum. They will be accompanied by public lectures aimed at attracting local audiences, delivered by the research team at the screenings.

These groups will be engaged though cultural organisations such as film clubs, theatres, art galleries and exhibition spaces, local libraries, community centres and through online networks. Research findings will be disseminated through liaison with UoN and BCU press offices with press releases for national and international media outlets. Members of local migrant communities will be accessed by relevant staff and international students studying at the universities. Students of different nationalities and ethnicities will be invited via staff teaching on salient modules such as the recently launched Black Studies undergraduate degree programme at BCU, and the universities' international offices and student societies. Debates on the possibilities, benefits and disadvantages of the new media, e.g. the mobile phone and I-Pad tablet, in accessing visual culture will aim to engage the wider public as well as members of the universities.

Film screenings and associated events aims to:

Bring the diaspora screen media texts investigated to the mainstream and the target audiences identified above via our creative partners; e.g. Northampton's Threshold Studios, The Errol Flynn Filmhouse, Media Archive of Central England (MACE), Flatpack Film Festival (Birmingham), local media and film clubs. Some of the screenings will be dedicated to diaspora cinema from new or emerging directors.

Offer public opportunities for film education about new media ecologies and the politics of representation, through pre-screening lectures and talks. These will be filmed and/or audio-recorded and made freely available on the network's website and/or through the project's YouTube channel.

Engage UoN and BCU students and lecturers in TV, film and media to participate in workshops in relation to distribution outlets and channels such as BBC3, Amazon, Zee TV, Netflix and other online distributors of video content.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Title 6 Creative Awards Projects 
Description 6 creative projects were funded, supporting international creatives who made films, presentations, new writing and creative performances related to DSMN issues. 
Type Of Art Artistic/Creative Exhibition 
Year Produced 2021 
Impact Artists and creatives being able to develop their work, networks and practice as a result of the DSMNetwork Awards. 
URL https://www.bcu.ac.uk/media/research/research-groups/creative-industries/research-projects/diaspora-...
 
Title Film/Video/Animation - Viewing Habits in Lockdown (2021) 
Description This 30 minute film 'Viewing Habits in Lockdown' consists of interviews with people who had been in lockdown or social isolation, to consider their screen media choices, habits and engagement with new media.. SIx interviews were conducted and each participant was invited to speak on how their viewing practices had changed from their previous habits during this time- eg in terms of accessing visual media, and responding to images of Black British/British Asian diaspora subjects. Each was asked to give one to two examples of Black British and/or British Asian screen media that inspired, entertained or enhanced their lives through lockdown. The film was commissioned by the Diaspora Screen Media Network, undertaken by a lecturer in film production at the University of Northampton, and funded by University of Northampton Changemaker Hub, 
Type Of Art Film/Video/Animation 
Year Produced 2021 
Impact Discussion with filmmaker at the September 14 2021 Diaspora Screen Media virtual workshop with c 10 participants. The film is currently located under resources on the DSMN website and has been viewed a number of times by the interviewees, members of the public, network members, and researchers who are interested in the topics of viewing habits and the reception of visual content in the form of feature films and miniseries in the digital age. 
 
Title Project blogs 
Description 16 new blogs were researched and written by different contributors across the project team from the immediate academic research team to creative partners, students and cultural stakeholders. 
Type Of Art Creative Writing 
Year Produced 2021 
Impact The blogs have been shared widely by the project team members across their social media, and have attracted new people to enquire about the project and the work of the artists featured. 
URL https://www.bcu.ac.uk/media/research/research-groups/creative-industries/research-projects/diaspora-...
 
Description How Black British and British Asian media makers and creatives engaged with issues of representation, social media uses, and media-making, particularly since the Covid pandemic.
Exploitation Route Being aware of a network of Black British and British Asian students, academics and creatives working across the field of film, media, cultural studies, and diaspora and post-colonial studies and productions.
Sectors Creative Economy,Education,Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections

URL https://www.bcu.ac.uk/media/research/research-groups/creative-industries/research-projects/diaspora-screen-media-network
 
Description We have created a network of Black British and British Asian creatives to come together in one in-person event (pre-Covid) and the rest 2-3 events online (since Covid) to learn and find out about each others work and to network with each other.
First Year Of Impact 2019
Sector Creative Economy,Education,Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections
Impact Types Cultural,Societal,Economic

 
Description Diaspora Screen Media Workshop virtual workshop: New Screen Media/Social Media: the digital environment in a post-COVID world 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Study participants or study members
Results and Impact The workshop was convened to discuss the new viewing practices in relation to screen media and social network apps in the field of Black British and British diaspora screen media. The discussion in the first part of the workshop covered the visual imprint and record of diaspora screen media in terms of collectibles and preservation, memorabilia, ephemera, film and popular music archives and exhibitions. Attendees introduced a poster, clip, image or other artefact related to a film or TV miniseries they had seen, and discussed key issues relating to the Network's concerns with the representation of Black British and British Asian characters. A recent output from the project, the 30 minute film directed and produced by Nathan Dodzo (University of Northampton) on viewing habits in lockdown was introduced and discussed in relation to points raised by the six people who were interviewed: eg streaming services vs mainstream cinema, representation and funding and issues of power in black British media. In the second half of the workshop there was discussion of several short online videos featuring British Asian comedian Guz Khan (such as Man Like Mobeen) which attendees watched prior to the workshop: There were question and a sharing/debating of views; some attendees posted blogs on the Networks website and the film has been posted under Resources
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2021
URL https://www.bcu.ac.uk/media/research/research-groups/creative-industries/research-projects/diaspora-...