Description

Book Synopsis

How did Australia’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander population go from being the objectified subjects of documentary films to the directors and producers in the digital age? What prompted these changes and how and when did this decolonisation of documentary film production occur? Taking a long historical perspective, this book is based on a study of a selection of Australian documentary films produced by and about Aboriginal peoples since the early twentieth century. The films signpost significant shifts in Anglo-Australian attitudes about Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders and trace the growth of the Indigenous filmmaking industry in Australia.

Used as a form of resistance to the imposition of colonialism, filmmaking gave Aboriginal people greater control over their depiction on documentary film and the medium has become an avenue to contest widely held assumptions about a peaceful colonial settlement. This study considers how developments in camera and film stock technologies along with filmic techniques influenced the depiction of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders. The films are also examined within their historical context, employing them to gauge how social attitudes, access to funding and political pressures influenced their production values. The book aims to expose the course of race relations in Australia through the decolonisation of documentary film by Aboriginal filmmakers, tracing their struggle to achieve social justice and self-representation.



Trade Review

«This book provides a welcome overview of an intensely important area of Australian cinema history, tracing developments which have affected real lives among our Indigenous peoples. Debenham’s work is rich with information and insights, and is admirably accessible for both educational and general publics.» (Andrew Pike, Managing Director, Pike Films)



Table of Contents

CONTENTS: The Last of Their Kind: Aboriginal Life in Central Australia (1901) – Physical Traits: Life in Central Australia (1931) – Benign and Iconic: Aborigines of the Sea Coast (1950) – The «Last» of Their Kind, Again: Desert People (1967) – Not Dying Out Quietly: Warburton Aborigines (1957) – A Discomforting Assimilation: The Change At Groote (1968) – Challenging White Indifference: Ningla-A-Na (Hungry for Our Land) (1972) – Telling My Story My Way: My Survival As An Aboriginal (1978) – On Being Stolen: Lousy Little Sixpence (1983) – Picking Up the Broken Pieces: Link-Up Diary (1987) – Setting the Records Straight: Whispering in Our Hearts: The Mowla Bluff Massacre (2002) – The Sounds of Spaces Between: Willaberta Jack (2007) – Breaking the Drought at the Sydney Film Festival: We Don’t Need a Map (2017), Occupation Native (2017), In My Own Words (2017) and Connecting to Country (2017).

Celluloid Subjects to Digital Directors: Changing

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    A Hardback by Jennifer Debenham

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      View other formats and editions of Celluloid Subjects to Digital Directors: Changing by Jennifer Debenham

      Publisher: Peter Lang International Academic Publishers
      Publication Date: 28/04/2020
      ISBN13: 9781789974782, 978-1789974782
      ISBN10: 178997478X

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      How did Australia’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander population go from being the objectified subjects of documentary films to the directors and producers in the digital age? What prompted these changes and how and when did this decolonisation of documentary film production occur? Taking a long historical perspective, this book is based on a study of a selection of Australian documentary films produced by and about Aboriginal peoples since the early twentieth century. The films signpost significant shifts in Anglo-Australian attitudes about Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders and trace the growth of the Indigenous filmmaking industry in Australia.

      Used as a form of resistance to the imposition of colonialism, filmmaking gave Aboriginal people greater control over their depiction on documentary film and the medium has become an avenue to contest widely held assumptions about a peaceful colonial settlement. This study considers how developments in camera and film stock technologies along with filmic techniques influenced the depiction of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders. The films are also examined within their historical context, employing them to gauge how social attitudes, access to funding and political pressures influenced their production values. The book aims to expose the course of race relations in Australia through the decolonisation of documentary film by Aboriginal filmmakers, tracing their struggle to achieve social justice and self-representation.



      Trade Review

      «This book provides a welcome overview of an intensely important area of Australian cinema history, tracing developments which have affected real lives among our Indigenous peoples. Debenham’s work is rich with information and insights, and is admirably accessible for both educational and general publics.» (Andrew Pike, Managing Director, Pike Films)



      Table of Contents

      CONTENTS: The Last of Their Kind: Aboriginal Life in Central Australia (1901) – Physical Traits: Life in Central Australia (1931) – Benign and Iconic: Aborigines of the Sea Coast (1950) – The «Last» of Their Kind, Again: Desert People (1967) – Not Dying Out Quietly: Warburton Aborigines (1957) – A Discomforting Assimilation: The Change At Groote (1968) – Challenging White Indifference: Ningla-A-Na (Hungry for Our Land) (1972) – Telling My Story My Way: My Survival As An Aboriginal (1978) – On Being Stolen: Lousy Little Sixpence (1983) – Picking Up the Broken Pieces: Link-Up Diary (1987) – Setting the Records Straight: Whispering in Our Hearts: The Mowla Bluff Massacre (2002) – The Sounds of Spaces Between: Willaberta Jack (2007) – Breaking the Drought at the Sydney Film Festival: We Don’t Need a Map (2017), Occupation Native (2017), In My Own Words (2017) and Connecting to Country (2017).

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