Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 What do the Critics Say?
- Chapter 2 A Theoretical Coalition?
- Chapter 3 Gone South: From East to Southern Africa
- Chapter 4 Private Lodges, Infrastructures and Guides
- Chapter 5 Going South: The Results
- Chapter 6 The Early History
- Chapter 7 The South Africans Enter the Game
- Chapter 8 Michael Rosenberg and Partridge Films
- Chapter 9 David and Carol Hughes
- Chapter 10 The Bartletts in the Namib, the Liversedges in Botswana
- Chapter 11 John Varty, Elmon Mhlongo and Londolozi
- Chapter 12 Richard Goss and Kim Wolhuter
- Chapter 13 Dereck and Beverly Joubert
- Chapter 14 Other Major Contributors
- Chapter 15 Going Live: Africam And Wildearth
- Chapter 16 Craig and Damon Foster
- Chapter 17 Must Love Animals?
- Chapter 18 The Social Turn
- Chapter 19 The Future of the Genre
- Chapter 20 The Influence of the Genre
- Conclusion
- Filmography
- Plates
- References
- Index
Chapter 3 - Gone South: From East to Southern Africa
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 January 2023
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 What do the Critics Say?
- Chapter 2 A Theoretical Coalition?
- Chapter 3 Gone South: From East to Southern Africa
- Chapter 4 Private Lodges, Infrastructures and Guides
- Chapter 5 Going South: The Results
- Chapter 6 The Early History
- Chapter 7 The South Africans Enter the Game
- Chapter 8 Michael Rosenberg and Partridge Films
- Chapter 9 David and Carol Hughes
- Chapter 10 The Bartletts in the Namib, the Liversedges in Botswana
- Chapter 11 John Varty, Elmon Mhlongo and Londolozi
- Chapter 12 Richard Goss and Kim Wolhuter
- Chapter 13 Dereck and Beverly Joubert
- Chapter 14 Other Major Contributors
- Chapter 15 Going Live: Africam And Wildearth
- Chapter 16 Craig and Damon Foster
- Chapter 17 Must Love Animals?
- Chapter 18 The Social Turn
- Chapter 19 The Future of the Genre
- Chapter 20 The Influence of the Genre
- Conclusion
- Filmography
- Plates
- References
- Index
Summary
Introduction
This chapter explores why and how African wildlife documentary moved significantly from East to Southern Africa in the late 1970s and 1980s, at a time when southern Africa faced considerable political turmoil: the struggle for independence in South-West Africa/Namibia; the June 1976 upheavals in Soweto; the battle for independence in Mozambique and Angola.
Chapter 4 will examine the importance of the rise of private lodges and a guiding culture in more detail and Chapter 5 outlines, through a critical comparison of Southern African with British productions, and particularly those of the BBC’s NHU, what the distinctive strengths and achievements of Southern African wildlife productions were and are. These chapters thus summarize much of the material that will be covered in more detail in later chapters that take a more historical and chronological approach.
Drawing on the theoretical insights of Bourdieu, Latour and Peters, this chapter examines three major sets of factors, agents and infrastructures: the background of the filmmakers; the legal, economic and political factors enabling the development of a local industry; and the crucial agents and infrastructures that enabled Southern Africans to go beyond relying on outsiders who made films in Africa. These cultural, political, economic and technological factors made it possible for Southern Africa to move from being simply a site for colonial or imperial production to being a place where Southern Africans were, arguably, producing the most interesting work in the genre. Given the difficulties subordinated formerly colonial cultures have in achieving this kind of cultural status, the achievement and the conditions for it matter.
The Filmmakers
Who were the filmmakers producing the major documentaries and what brought them to Southern Africa during this period if they came from other countries? I asked Jen Bartlett why she and her husband Des, both Australian-born, but the first major filmmaking couple in East Africa who had worked with Armand Denis and inspired Alan and Joan Root, had ended up in the Namib and spent the last years of their career in Southern Africa. Her answer succinctly sets out the push and pull factors involved in their eventual settling in Namibia:
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Wildlife Documentaries in Southern AfricaFrom East to South, pp. 31 - 44Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2022