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Recollect: home video and the autobiographical self

A thesis submitted to the Faculty of Arts, University of the
Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in fulfilment of the
requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy.
Johannesburg, 2015 / This research looks at home video footage and family photographs as part of
the visual portrait of a curated record of the autobiographical self. The
research includes a written thesis exploring the theoretical concerns and
provides a reflexive analysis of the creative component of the PhD, which is a
60-minute documentary film. The research, both creative and written,
assesses how autobiographical memory is informed and shaped by home
video recordings, and how new digital formats have allowed home video to
collapse the boundaries between the personal and the public. It also explores
how personal narratives speak to the wider socio-political and cultural
concerns of a particular time. These ‘collapses’ between boundaries provide a
playful, pluralistic approach to a history of the self. The many paradigms that
coexist within the work – the past and the present, time and space, previously
accepted narratives and newly formed ones – do not exist as binary to each
other, but rather exist in conversation with each other and serves to explore
the ever elastic subject/object dichotomy.
The autobiographical film is titled Fraternal, with the tagline ‘The future isn’t
like it used to be’. It tells the emotional story of the relationships between
myself and my twin, and our parents – the hellos and goodbyes, arrivals and
departures, beginnings and endings that happen within family ties. The film is
set against the backdrop of the political situation in southern Africa during the
1980s and 1990s. It is cut predominantly from personal home video footage: a
mixture of Super 8mm, Hi8 and DV footage shot largely between 1984 and
1994 in Zimbabwe and South Africa

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:wits/oai:wiredspace.wits.ac.za:10539/19895
Date January 2015
CreatorsComninos, Nicola
Source SetsSouth African National ETD Portal
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
FormatOnline resource (117 leaves), application/pdf, application/pdf

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