header image
 

Handsworth Songs – Black Audio Film Collective

handsworth-songs-black-audio-film-collective

Handsworth Songs , directed by John Akomfrah, was the first major film of the Black Audio Film Collective. It explores the origins of the uprisings by black communities in Handsworth, Birmingham, England, in 1985. Its themes are race, memory, ideology and Britain’s colonial past. Running throughout Handsworth Songs is the idea that the riots were the outcome of British society’s suppression of black presence and black desire in Britain. The film portrays civil disorder as an opening onto a secret history of dissatisfaction, associated with industrial decline and the crisis of documentary as a mode of address. The term ‘Songs’ refers not to musicality, but instead invokes the idea of documentary as a poetic montage of associations, familiar from the British documentary cinema of John Grierson and Humphrey Jennings. Inaugurated in 1982 and dissolved in 1998, the seven-person Black Audio Film Collective is widely acknowledged as one of the most influential artist groups to emerge from Britain in recent years. They have produced award winning film, photography, slide tape, video, installation, posters and interventions, much of which was dedicated to engaging with the past, present and future of memory, media and moving image.

Related Posts with Thumbnails

~ by documentary on May 25, 2009.

Video, civil rights, featured
  • Simon
    BBC 1 "Inside Out"

    Portrait of Handsworth riots 1985 by Pogus Caesar


    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v...
  • TianX2
    Heavy documentary!
  • Mandrake45
    Well balanced view by pogus, it puts some context on what happened last week!
blog comments powered by Disqus