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"Kore wa dare no Eiga ka? Dokyumentari Eiga to Ajia no Kyotsu no Kioku" (Whose film is this? Documentary film and collective memory in Asia)

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Morris-Suzuki, Tessa

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Iwanami Shoten

Abstract

This chapter takes an essay by Australian ethnographic film maker David McDougall as the starting point for exploring the ownership of archival documentary film material. �Ownership� in this context means not only legal ownership (copyright etc.), but also a sense of identification with the content of the film. The chapter introduces case studies of a number of documentary fragments taken in East Asia in the mid-twentieth century, and now held in Australian and New Zealand archives. It explores the ways in which the film-makers perceive and represent their East Asian subjects, and considers ways in which these film fragments could be re-incorporated into, and reinterpreted in, historical memory and historical debates in East Asia.

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Book Title

Shomotsu to Eizo no Mirai: Guguruka suru Sekai no Chi no Karai to wa (The Future of Books and Images: Problems of knowledge in a Googlized world)

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2037-12-31
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