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Understanding film and video as tools for change : applying participatory video and video advocacy in South AfricaCain, Julia 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (DPhil (Drama))--Stellenbosch University, 2009. / The purpose of this study is to examine critically the phenomenon of participatory
video and to situate within this the participatory video project that was initiated as
part of this study in the informal settlement area of Kayamandi, South Africa. The overall objective of the dissertation is to consider the potential of participatory video within current-day South Africa towards enabling marginalised groups to represent themselves and achieve social change.
As will be shown, the term ‘participatory video’ has been used broadly and applied to
many different types of video products and processes. For the preliminary purposes
of this dissertation, participatory video is defined as any video (or film) process
dedicated to achieving change through which the subject(s) has been an integral
part of the planning and/or production, as well as a primary end-user or target
audience. The two key elements that distinguish participatory video are thus (1)
understanding video (or film) as a tool for social change; and (2) understanding
participation by the subject as integral to the video process.
An historical analysis thus considers various filmmaking developments that fed into
the emergence of participatory video. These include various film practices that used
film as a tool for change -- from soviet agitprop through to the documentary
movement of the 1930s, as well as various types of filmmaking in the 1960s that
opened up questions of participation. The Fogo process, developed in the late
1960s, marked the start of participatory video and video advocacy and provided
guiding principles for the Kayamandi project initiated as part of this dissertation.
Practitioners of the Fogo process helped initiate participatory video practice in South
Africa when they brought the process to South African anti-apartheid activists in the
early 1970s. The Kayamandi Participatory Video Project draws on this background
and context in its planned methodology and its implementation. Out of this, various
theoretical issues arising from participatory video practice contextualise a reflection
and an analysis of the Kayamandi project. Lastly, this study draws conclusions and
recommendations on participatory video practice in South Africa.
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Both sides of the camera: anthropology and video in the study of a Gcaleka women's rite called Intonjane.Cloete, Laura 09 February 2015 (has links)
This thesis explores the potential of video as a research
tool for anthropologists in the recording of a single
ritual. The study examines interactions between
ethnographers, informants and viewers. The thesis
reveals the capacity of video to make possible close,
detailed readings of performance in terms not originally
anticipated by the researcher. Archival storage of the
video recording allows for critique and assessment of the
research.
The case study chosen in which to test the potential of
\ dcso as a research tool was a woman's 'initiation'
r^L'ial (called inton jane) in Shixini in the Eastern Gape
(in what was, until recently, the independent homeland of
Transkei). Historically, the ritual was supposedly held
at the time of a girl's first menstruation, this being
the physical symbol of her transformation into adulthood.
Ritual seclusion served to effect an accompanying social
transformation in preparation for marriage.
Paradoxically, in the late 1980's, it was older women and
mothers, already married and well past the age of first
menstruation, who were undergoing the ritual seclusion
and symbolic marriage. The study explores this paradox
with the goal of understanding the purpose of the ritual
in contemporary times. By recording large segments of
the ritual on video, and subjecting the footage to a
close analysis of verbal and non-verbal aspects of
performance, both the ritual and the merits of video as
a research tool could be examined.
Video was utilised, in an interactive research process,
as an information elicitation tool. The analysis of the
recorded text of the ritual brings to the fore elements
which make what is apparently a paradox understandable.
The elements which explicate the paradox were not
anticipated when the research commenced, and in all
likelihood would have eluded a researcher who did not
have the benefit of the incidental capture on video. The
thesis reveals the enormous Contribution video can make
to research and suggests that video has an important
contribution to make to the discipline of anthropology.
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