Films as things in Colonial India

This article argues that a visual product is also material, in the sense that visual objects (even digital) can circulate in the most varied spaces and, depending on the context, can acquire or express very different properties. This article is based on research conducted by the author on film archi...

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Main Author: Banks, M
Format: Journal article
Language:Portuguese
English
Published: Laboratório de Imagem e Som em Antropologia 2020
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author Banks, M
author_facet Banks, M
author_sort Banks, M
collection OXFORD
description This article argues that a visual product is also material, in the sense that visual objects (even digital) can circulate in the most varied spaces and, depending on the context, can acquire or express very different properties. This article is based on research conducted by the author on film archives in India and the United Kingdom. The aim is to show that nonfiction films (and the duration of filming) filmed by British colonial officials and visitors from India in the first half of the 20th century form visual "documents" that are based on photographic conventions and earlier films. At the same time, Indian fiction cinema takes shape, with the pioneering work of DG Phalke. Theaters use the same materials, possibly the same types of cameras, but without intersecting.
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spelling oxford-uuid:766180c7-6a64-4ad3-8cf0-45c682a71b382022-03-26T20:15:35ZFilms as things in Colonial IndiaJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:766180c7-6a64-4ad3-8cf0-45c682a71b38PortugueseEnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordLaboratório de Imagem e Som em Antropologia2020Banks, MThis article argues that a visual product is also material, in the sense that visual objects (even digital) can circulate in the most varied spaces and, depending on the context, can acquire or express very different properties. This article is based on research conducted by the author on film archives in India and the United Kingdom. The aim is to show that nonfiction films (and the duration of filming) filmed by British colonial officials and visitors from India in the first half of the 20th century form visual "documents" that are based on photographic conventions and earlier films. At the same time, Indian fiction cinema takes shape, with the pioneering work of DG Phalke. Theaters use the same materials, possibly the same types of cameras, but without intersecting.
spellingShingle Banks, M
Films as things in Colonial India
title Films as things in Colonial India
title_full Films as things in Colonial India
title_fullStr Films as things in Colonial India
title_full_unstemmed Films as things in Colonial India
title_short Films as things in Colonial India
title_sort films as things in colonial india
work_keys_str_mv AT banksm filmsasthingsincolonialindia